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US: Medical pot ID card plan approved

Chris Nichols

Union Democrat

Tuesday 28 Mar 2006

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The Calaveras County Board of Supervisors yesterday approved a new
medical marijuana identification program, despite concerns raised by
several medical pot patients, two supervisors and the sheriff.

The board's 4-0 vote puts the county in compliance with a state ID
program, which aims to make it easier for law enforcement to determine
who is, and who is not, a medical marijuana patient.

Supervisor Steve Wilensky was absent yesterday.

The program takes effect April 3, and will be administered by the county
Public Health Department.

The approval did not please several medical pot patients, who said
yesterday that the voluntary program could allow authorities to abuse
the rights of patients.

"The next thing they'll do is put a big (marijuana) leaf on our outer
garments to let people know we're a danger!" said Sonoran Christopher
DeMars after yesterday's board meeting in San Andreas.

DeMars' said his father, also named Christopher DeMars, has used medical
marijuana for two decades to treat symptoms related to multiple sclerosis.

The father and son urged supervisors to reject the program, saying it
would require patients to give up too much information to authorities
and reduce the amount of marijuana that patients can legally possess.

Medical marijuana use has been legal since 1996, when voters passed the
state's Compassionate Use Act.

To sign up for the ID program, patients must provide the county's Public
Health Department with proof of their identity and residence, and a
recommendation for marijuana from a physician licensed in California.
The application fee is $45.

While the program will allow for ID cards, it also synchronizes state
and county guidelines regarding the possession and cultivation of
medical marijuana.

For example, it reduces the amount of marijuana patients can legally
possess in Calaveras County from two pounds to the state limit of 8 ounces.

The county set the 2-pound limit several years ago, before the state
established its own threshold.

But the DeMars and Supervisor Tom Tryon said patients should be able to
possess two pounds of pot, especially since there aren't any cannabis
dispensaries nearby.

"We went through an extensive process five years ago," Tryon said,
referring to the county's medical marijuana task force that set
guidelines for growing and possessing the plant in Calaveras County.

Patients will still be able to grow and cultivate six mature marijuana
plants as before. But Supervisor Merita Callaway questioned how
cultivators will stay under the 8-ounce limit when they harvest their
plants, many of which can produce several pounds of pot each.

"I'd like to think that the sheriff would exercise some discretion in
September and October," the harvest season, she said.

Calaveras County Sheriff Dennis Downum said he supports the ID program,
but noted there are still many gray areas regarding medical marijuana
enforcement.

"There is no consistency anywhere in this arena," Downum said after the
meeting, adding that he would prefer the ID program be mandatory.

"It does kind of keep us in a state of confusion," he said.

Downum has been outspoken in the past about the abuses of medical
marijuana, saying that many people have received marijuana
recommendations without truly needing them. He's also noted that the
federal government still considers medical marijuana illegal, and that
his department would cooperate with federal authorities in enforcing
their marijuana laws if asked.

Downum and the DeMars agree on one point: They feel few, if any, medical
marijuana patients will sign up for the ID cards.

The younger DeMars noted that only about 20 people in Amador County have
signed up for the cards. That county has had the program for several months.

Sally Farrington, a medical marijuana patient from Hathaway Pines, said
with the recent revelations of domestic spying by the federal government
that she doesn't trust any authorities.

"With all the stuff that's been going on, I don't want to give my name
to anyone," she said.

 

 

 

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