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February 18, 1999
AIDS Coalition Demands White House Legalize
Medical Marijuana
February 18, 1999, Washington, D.C.:
Leaders of 17 national AIDS organizations sent a letter yesterday to the Office of
National Drug Control Policy demanding federal officials allow doctors to prescribe
marijuana to people suffering from the disease.
"We urge you to help break the
bureaucratic logjam that is keeping potentially life-saving medicine, marijuana, virtually
inaccessible to thousands of people living with AIDS," says the letter, signed by the
AIDS Action Council, San Francisco AIDS Foundation, Latino Commission on AIDS, AIDS
Project Los Angeles, the Whitman-Walker Clinic, the Northwest AIDS Foundation, and other
health organizations around the country. They affirm that physicians specializing in
AIDS care "widely recognize ... marijuana ... as an important component of treatment
for some patients who suffer from symptoms of advanced-stage HIV disease and the
multiple-drug therapies used to manage HIV."
Signatories implore Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey
to recommend immediate approval of the drug for seriously ill patients.
"Terminally ill patients cannot afford to wait for years of research to prove
something they already know: medical marijuana works." They conclude,
"Under these circumstances, making marijuana immediately available ... to patients
living with AIDS ... is a moderate step that can add to the federal government's
responsiveness to the epidemic."
The coalition notes that the Clinton
administration already allows physicians to prescribe certain experimental AIDS
medications prior to final FDA approval. They argue that marijuana's relative safety
and apparent efficacy warrant it similar status.
"Thousands of Americans, many of them
living with HIV, use marijuana as a medicine illegally, putting themselves at risk of
arrest and prosecution," they state. "People should not have to risk their
health or jail to receive needed medical care."
Proponents sent additional copies of the letter
to the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the Director of the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration, the Office of National AIDS Policy and the U.S. House and Senate Majority
and Minority Leaders.
AIDS organizations historically have been
outspoken in their support for legalizing medical marijuana. The Washington D.C.
based AIDS Action Council first called for "an elimination of federal restrictions
that bar doctors from prescribing marijuana for medical use" in November 1996.
Several other prominent California AIDS organizations joined a successful class
action lawsuit in 1997 that limited the government's ability to sanction doctors who
recommend marijuana as a therapy for their patients. This latest coalition marks the
first time so many AIDS groups have united for "legal, immediate access to
marijuana."
NORML Foundation Executive Director Allen St.
Pierre called the campaign significant, and representative of the broad support that
exists for legalizing medical marijuana. "Patients, doctors, and nurses support
granting patients legal access to medical marijuana," he said. "It remains
politicians in Washington, not voters or the medical community, who continue to support
policies prohibiting the use of marijuana as a legal medicine."
For more information, please contact either
Allen St. Pierre or Paul Armentano of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751.
Additional information is also available from Rachel Swain of Communication Works @
(415) 255-1946.
Medical Marijuana Opponents Mount Challenges In Oregon, Washington
February 18, 1999, Portland, OR:
Legislators in Oregon and Washington are proposing legislation to restrict
patients' ability to use medical marijuana legally under initiatives passed in November.
"This is completely unnecessary,"
said Oregon initiative backer Geoff Sugerman. "This is an effort to open the
door to wholesale changes to a law the voters passed just a couple of months ago."
Rob Killian, a Tacoma physician who spearheaded
the Washington campaign, voiced similar concern. "It's a blind-sided attempt to
basically bring the government back into regulation of patients' and doctors'
relationships," he said.
Oregon's new law allows patients holding state
permits to possess limited quantities of medical marijuana, and provides a legal defense
for non-registered patients who use the drug under a doctor's supervision. The state
Health Division is responsible for issuing registration cards to patients, but has not yet
done so. Proposed legislative changes to the law drafted by Rep. Kevin Mannix
(R-Salem) would remove legal protections for patients who possess more than one ounce of
medical marijuana or cultivate more than three mature plants at one time. House Bill
3052 also eliminates provisions requiring police to return medical marijuana to patients
if they seized it improperly.
Washington's law allows patients who have a
doctor's recommendation to possess up to a 60 day supply of medical marijuana.
Proposed changes to the law in S.B. 5771 would require physicians who recommend
marijuana to a patient to notify the state each time they do so. It would also allow
law enforcement access to the records of all patients and physicians who use or recommend
medical marijuana.
"Senate Bill 5771 will make it as
difficult as possible for patients and doctors to use medical marijuana," said Dave
Fratello of Americans for Medical Rights. "This bill is all about regulating
and intimidating doctors and patients so severely that they will not take advantage of
Washington's new state law."
For more information, please contact either
R. Keith Stroup, Esq. of NORML @ (202) 483-5500 or Dave Fratello of Americans for Medical
Rights @ (310) 394-2952.
Medical Marijuana Gains Ground in Hawaii
February 18, 1999, Honolulu, HI:
Legislation that would exempt patients who use marijuana medicinally from state
criminal penalties gained approval from the House Health Committee this week.
Supporters of the measure include Gov. Ben Cayetano and Health Director Bruce
Anderson.
Drug Policy Forum of Hawaii President Donald
Topping said he was encouraged by the strong show of support. "I am feeling
better about the possibility of the legal use of medicinal marijuana in Hawaii than ever
before," he said. "We have the governor's support, as well as that of many
informed and compassionate members of the Legislature. Only law enforcement and the
politically driven medical associations stand in the way."
House Bill 1157 allows patients with a doctor's
recommendation to possess marijuana for medical use. The proposal also allows
patients to assert their medical use of marijuana as an affirmative defense to any
marijuana-related prosecution. Lawmakers removed provisions requiring patients to
enroll in a confidential patient registry, Topping said.
The measure also demands Congress to legalize
prescriptive access to marijuana for all Americans. "[We] request the United
States Congress and the President to enact appropriate legislation to permit marijuana to
be prescribed by physicians and to allow states to develop regulations to ensure a safe,
affordable, and controlled supply of marijuana for medical use," the bill states.
The bill now goes before the House Judiciary
Committee where lawmakers must act on it before March 5, 1999. A Senate committee
will vote on a pair of similar proposals tomorrow.
For more information, please contact either
Donald Topping of The Drug Policy Forum of Hawaii @ (808) 988-4386 or R. Keith Stroup,
Esq. of NORML @ (202) 483-5500.
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