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News Release |
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NORML SPECIAL LEGISLATIVE ALERT
Federal Bill Reintroduced To Legalize Medical Marijuana
March 2, 1999, Washington, D.C.:
Representative Barney Frank (D-Mass.) reintroduced legislation today in the new
Congress to provide for the medical use of marijuana. The bill is titled the
"Medical Use of Marijuana Act."
"I support the medical use of
marijuana," Rep. Frank announced. "What we need to do to get marijuana
into the hands of people suffering is to set aside the federal controls on marijuana, so
the states can determine this issue for themselves."
The proposed legislation states:
"No provision of the Controlled Substances Act [or] ... the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act shall prohibit or otherwise restrict --
(A) the prescription or recommendation of
marijuana by a physician for medical use,
(B) an individual from obtaining and using
marijuana from a prescription or recommendation of marijuana by a physician for medical
use by such individual, or
(C) a pharmacy from obtaining and holding
marijuana for the prescription of marijuana by a physician for medical use under
applicable state law in a State in which marijuana may be prescribed or recommended by a
physician for medical use under applicable State law."
The legislation reschedules marijuana from
Schedule I to Schedule II under federal law, thereby making it legal for physicians to
prescribe. "This legislation ... recognize[s] that there are valid and
important medicinal uses for marijuana," a statement issued by Frank's office said.
"The effect of [this] bill would be to make fully operative the laws in those
states which permit the medical use of marijuana, without the pre-emptive and controlling
restrictions currently in place in federal law on the possession, use, prescription, or
sale of marijuana," Frank added.
NORML Executive Director R. Keith Stroup, Esq.,
who worked with Frank's office in drafting the bill's language, said the legislation is a
streamlined effort to get marijuana to those who require it.
"Historically, states have been more
receptive to the medical marijuana issue than the federal government," Stroup
explained, noting that 36 state legislatures have passed laws recognizing marijuana's
medical value. "This legislation addresses this paradigm and effectively gets
the federal government out of the way of those states that wish to make marijuana
available as a medicine."
Efforts to permit the legal use of medical
marijuana gained momentum in November when voters in Alaska, Nevada, Oregon, and
Washington joined Californians in approving initiatives exempting patients who use medical
marijuana from criminal penalties. Voters in Arizona reaffirmed a medical marijuana
initiative passed two years ago, and rejected a legislative requirement banning physicians
from prescribing marijuana until the drug receives approval from the Food and Drug
Administration. Recently, leaders of 17 national AIDS organizations called on White
House officials to legalize medical marijuana for seriously ill patients.
The Medical Use of Marijuana Act also mandates
federal officials to supply marijuana for medical research projects approved by the Food
and Drug Administration. Recently, the United Nations International Drug Control
Board recommended that the U.S. and others conduct impartial scientific research to
determine marijuana's potential medical benefits.
Congressman Frank has been joined in
co-sponsoring this legislation by Reps. Tom Campbell (R-Calif.), John Conyers (D-Mich.),
John Olver (D-Mass.), Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), Pete Stark (D-Calif.), Lynn Woolsey
(D-Calif.).
For more information, please contact either
Keith Stroup or Paul Armentano of NORML @ (202) 483-5500. Rep.
Barney Frank's office may be contacted @ (202) 225-5931.
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