Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

US: Medical Marijuana in the State Legislatures, 2004

DRCNet.org

Stopthedrugwar.org

Friday 19 Mar 2004

---
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/329/medmj2004.shtml


After a spate of victories for medical marijuana in the states at
the turn of the century, all but one via the initiative process,
the spread of legalized medical marijuana has been stalled. Last
year, the only medical marijuana victory was in Maryland, and that
vote didn't legalize medical marijuana but merely mandated a
maximum $100 fine (http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/288/yesandno.shtml).

Still, this year the effort continues as reformers and patients
take the fight to state legislatures around the country. Relying
primarily on a Marijuana Policy Project (http://www.mpp.org)
database, DRCNet has identified 10 states with medical marijuana
issues before the legislature: California, Connecticut, Hawaii,
Illinois, Mississippi, Missouri, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont,
and Wisconsin.

While victory has yet to be secured in any of them, movement
observers are pointing to one or more of the New England states as
the best chance to win a victory at the statehouse this year.
"We've been putting most of our resources into Illinois and the
New England states," said MPP communications director Bruce
Mirken. "I think our best, most realistic shot is in New England.
Last year in Connecticut, we got as far as a house floor vote, and
the bill's lead sponsor, Rep. Jim Abrams (D-Meriden), is talking
seriously about winning a floor vote this year," he told DRCNet.

"We've been activating our base, particularly in Vermont," said
Kris Krane of the National Organization for the Reform of
Marijuana Laws (http://www.norml.org). "We worked with MPP on the
successful initiative in Burlington
(http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/327/burlington.shtml)," Krane
told DRCNet. "Connecticut and Vermont look like the best bets,"
he said. "Those are both states where it came close to passing
last year."

Progress has been slow the last couple of years, MPP's Mirken
conceded, even as he pointed to some reasons why. "If there has
been a slowing in laws being enacted, it's not for lack of public
support, but because we are taking a more difficult road, going
through the legislatures in states where there is no initiative
process," he explained. "Most of our effort in the past couple of
years has been in the state legislatures. While working
legislatures has its advantages -- it is less expensive to do a
legislative lobbying campaign than a state-wide initiative
campaign -- it is inherently a slower and more difficult process.
Legislators are still easily spooked on this issue, and it is easy
for a key committee chairman to just bottle up a measure he
doesn't like."

And the opposition from the Office of National Drug Control Policy
(ONDCPthe drug czar's office) is more focused than before, Mirken
said. "Particularly under the Bush administration, the opposition
is more intense. Earlier this month, for instance, Dr. Andrea
Barthwell from the drug czar's office swooped into Illinois just
telling absolute lies, like claiming that Marinol doesn't get you
high. She needs to look in her Physicians' Desk Reference," he
groaned. "They've gone from spin and distortion and exaggeration
to flat-out shameless lies. That kind of intense opposition has
an effect; it puts Republican legislators and governors in a very
awkward position, even if they're inclined to be supportive. Do
you buck the White House in an election year? Still, even in the
face of all that, in many places we are getting bipartisan
support," Mirken said.

Here's what's going on state by state:

CALIFORNIA: SB 1494 would adjust California's existing medical
marijuana law by providing that a qualified patient or caregiver
may possess any amount of marijuana consistent with medical needs
and providing that a person holding a medical marijuana
identification card could not be arrested for possessing up to
eight ounces or six mature or 12 immature plants. The bill is set
for a hearing in the Committee on Health and Human Services on
Wednesday.

To read the California bill online, visit:
http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/cgi-bin/postquery?bill_number=sb_1494&sess=CUR&house=B&author=vasconcellos

CONNECTICUT: Persistence could pay off for Rep. James Abram (D-
Meriden) this year. He has introduced a bill each year since
2000, inching painfully closer each year. In his first try, he
failed to get a hearing; in his second try, he got a hearing but
no committee vote; last year, the bill was approved by the
Legislature Judiciary Committee before failing in a vote before
the House.

This year, the bill, HB 5355, is moving again. It passed the
Judiciary Committee on a 24-15 vote on Monday. Now it is headed
to the Legislative Commissioner's Office, where it will most
likely be forwarded to the Public Health Committee for further
review. It provides a legal defense for patients who use
marijuana for certain medical conditions with a doctor's
recommendation, and allow patients or caregivers to grow up to
five plants.

To read the bill and track its status online, visit:
http://www.cga.state.ct.us/asp/cgabillstatus/cgabillstatus.asp?selBillType=Bill&bill_num=HB05355&which_year=2004

HAWAII: Legislators in the Aloha State became the first (and
still only) in the nation to pass a medical marijuana bill in
2002. This year reformers are attempting to fine-tune the program
with SB2641. It contains changes in the law that would make the
program more efficient and easier for seriously ill patients, but
most significantly, it transfers administration of the state's
medical marijuana program from a law enforcement agency, the
Department of Public Safety, to the state Department of Health.

The bill has made it through the Senate, passing on a 22-1 vote on
March 9, and is now headed for the House Health, Judiciary, and
Finance committees. It could run into a roadblock there, said Pam
Lichty of the Drug Policy Forum of Hawaii, who has been monitoring
the bill's progress. "We have one committee chair who is going to
be a real hard sell," she told DRCNet.

To read the bill and related documents online, visit
http://www.capitol.hawaii.gov/site1/docs/docs.asp?press1=docs and
enter the bill's number, SB2641.

ILLINOIS: The Medical Cannabis Act, which would allow persons
diagnosed by a doctor as having a debilitating medical condition
and their primary caregivers to possess up to six plants and an
ounce of usable marijuana, appears to be stalled. Persons covered
under the act would be issued registry identification cards by the
Department of Human Services.

The bill got a hearing March 2 in the House Health Care
Availability and Access Committee, but MPP reported that because
it appeared the bill would be voted down in committee, Rep. Mary
Flowers (D-Chicago), the committee's chair and a medical marijuana
supporter, placed the bill in a subcommittee where it will
languish until another hearing can be scheduled this summer.

The Illinois bill was notable for attracting the presence of Dr.
Andrea Barthwell, deputy director for demand reduction at the drug
czar's office, who showed up as the measure was being considered
to lobby against it.

To read the bill, HB4868, and track its progress online, visit:
http://www.legis.state.il.us/legislation/billstatus.asp?DocNum=4868&GAID=3&DocTypeID=HB&LegID=9532&SessionID=3

MISSISSIPPI: HB84, which would have allowed the medical use of
marijuana by seriously ill patients under a doctor's supervision,
is dead. The Mississippi legislative web site reports that that
the bill, which was referred to the Judiciary Committee, died
there on March 9.

To read the bill and related documents online, visit:
http://billstatus.ls.state.ms.us/2004/html/history/HB/HB0084.htm

MISSOURI: Rep. Vicky Riback Wilson (D-Columbia) was back for the
second year with a bill that would allow patients to use marijuana
under a doctor's supervision. She managed to get a public hearing
before the Health Care Policy Committee on March 3, but the bill
is now effectively dead, with no further hearings or other actions
scheduled.

Wilson told the Columbia Missourian she had little hope for this
year. "In an election year particularly, legislators are afraid
that people will see them as either soft on crime or soft on
drugs," Wilson said. "So they are less likely to listen to the
reasonable arguments about alleviating pain."

To read the bill and related documents online, visit:
http://www.house.state.mo.us/bills041/bills/hb1348.htm

NEW YORK: A05796, the New York medical marijuana bill, is alive
and moving. It passed the Assembly Health Committee on an 18-6
vote February 25 and must now be approved by the Codes and Ways
and Means committees before going to a floor vote. If it passes
that hurdle, it faces a rockier reception in the Republican-
controlled state Senate.

Read DRCNet's in depth coverage of the battle in New York from
three weeks ago at:
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/326/nymedmj.shtml

Read the bill and related documents online at:
http://assembly.state.ny.us/leg/?bn=A05796

RHODE ISLAND: SB2357, the Rhode Island Medical Marijuana Act, was
introduced February 11 and has been referred to the Senate
Judiciary Committee. With no hearings scheduled, the bill appears
to be stalled. A companion bill introduced in the House, HB7588,
was introduced a week earlier and referred to the House Health
Education and Welfare committee, again with no hearings scheduled.

Read the text of the Senate bill online at:
http://www.rilin.state.ri.us/Billtext/BillText04/SenateText04/S2357.pdf

Read the text of the House bill online at:
http://www.rilin.state.ri.us/Billtext/BillText04/HouseText04/H7588.pdf

VERMONT: S76, the Vermont medical marijuana bill, was already
passed by the state Senate on a 22-7 vote and is currently before
the House Health and Welfare Committee. But it could die there.
Committee chair Tom Koch (R-Barre) told the Burlington Free Press
earlier this month it is unlikely the bill will move further
because he does not consider it a priority.

But the pressure is on. Fresh on the heels of a dramatic victory
(82%) in a Burlington initiative instructing the city to tell the
legislature to support medical marijuana, Vermont NORML targeted
Burlington Rep. Bill Keogh (D), who sits on the committee, to cast
a vote that could force Koch to address the bill.

To track the bill's status and read it online, visit:
http://www.leg.state.vt.us/database/status/summary.cfm?Bill=S%2E0076&Session=2004

WISCONSIN: AB892, the state's medical marijuana bill is dead this
session, said Gary Storck of Is My Medicine Legal Yet
(http://www.immly.org), the Wisconsin-based patients' right
organization deeply involved in the effort. "I just confirmed
with a staffer for my representative that the bill is dead as of
the end of session today," Storck said Tuesday. "We have to hope
it gets introduced early next January," he told DRCNet.

Wisconsin patients and caregivers were cheered last fall when Rep.
Gregg Underheim (R-Oshkosh) revealed he would introduce a bill,
but Storck said that bill was held up in drafting and not
introduced until February 23 -- too late for a legislative session
that ended this week.

Read the bill and its tracking information online at:
http://www.legis.state.wi.us/2003/data/AB892hst.html


 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!