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Canada: Pot Advocates Savour Big Victory

Allan Woods

London Free Press (CN ON)

Saturday 28 Jul 2001

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New rules take effect tomorrow allowing terminally ill patients to grow,
possess marijuana

Pot advocates are anticipating a major victory next week when sick and
terminally ill patients can apply for permits to possess and grow
marijuana for pain relief.

But some studying and debating the drug think the government might not
be prepared.

The new regulations, which take effect tomorrow, will let people with
conditions such as AIDS, multiple sclerosis, glaucoma and cancer apply
to the federal government for authorization to possess a 30-day stash of
the drug.

The regulations will also allow people to apply for licences to grow
marijuana for medicinal use.

The move by Health Canada is the result of a decision last year by the
Ontario Court of Appeal, which ruled the drug laws regulating marijuana
use by sick people was unconstitutional.

Lynn Harichy, a marijuana crusader who was arrested and charged after
she tried to light a joint on the steps of the London police station,
said she's happy with the decision.

"I think ( Health Canada ) is doing a good job," she said.

Harichy, who suffers from MS, said she hopes the move will bring
marijuana into the open, making it safer for people who need the drug to
treat their pain.

"Right now, who has control?" she said. "Not us. The drug dealers have
control."

But a University of Western Ontario researcher said the new regulations
may have been implemented with too little study.

"Minister ( Allan ) Rock did the right thing, but I personally would
have put a bunch of money into studying ( marijuana's ) uses," said
Michael Rieder, a physician and clinical pharmacologist.

He said the only studies done with marijuana have used extracts of the
drug swallowed orally rather than actual marijuana cigarettes.

Rieder also said many physicians will be reluctant to prescribe the
drug, in part, because of the stigma still attached to cannabis. "We
really think it puts us in a bad position," he said.

Rieder said sick people must remember that marijuana is a drug, just
like any other.

"The first thing to remember is that ( it ) works for some people but
not for all," he said.

A London merchant and pot activist thinks the government may be in for a
surprise when the applications begin arriving.

Pete Young, owner of Organic Traveller, a pot paraphernalia store on
Richmond Street, said there are more than 5,000 people across Canada who
frequent "compassion clubs" -- illegal marijuana suppliers. Yet less
than 300 people currently have an exemption from the federal government
to use the drug to ease their pain.

Roslyn Tremblay, a spokesperson for Health Canada, admits the government
has no idea how many sick people will apply. "It's impossible to make
projections," Tremblay said.

The new regulations require a doctor to endorse the person's application
and state that no other drug has offered them pain relief. Tremblay
said this should be enough to stop people from abusing the program.

Health Canada's move is part of a five-year study that's also looking at
how to stop "wasting" or deterioration in AIDS patients. It set up a
marijuana laboratory in Manitoba to cultivate the drug.

Tremblay said the federal crop should be available to those authorized
to have marijuana as early as January.


 

 

 

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