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I found this article today. Thought you might find it interesting. It's taken word for word from the April 15, 1998 issue of The News Journal. If you, or anyone else, cares to read and respond (they have a e-mail addres) instructions are at the end.
Have Mercy on Marijuana
by Willie L. Brown Jr.
San Francisco
resident Dixie Romagno, something as simple as taking a shower or climbing
stairs can make her double over in excruciating pain.
Dixie is in
her 20th year of multiple Sclerosis. To alleviate the agonizing bone
pain, spasms and spinal cord problems the wrack her body, this 46 -year
- old grandmother uses marijuana. Five million Californians backed
her right to do so when they approved a 1996 ballot measure that allows
the use of marijuana for people who suffer from AIDS, cancer and other
serious illnesses.
In San Francisco,
we’ve worked hard to honor that right by making marijuana obtainable through
a clinic that operates with the cooperation of local authorities.
But now the federal government wants to take away that right.
In January, the Justice Department filed a civil suit to shut down six
medical marijuana dispensaries in Northern California, including the San
Francisco Marijuana Cultivators Club, which Dixie, along with 8,000 other
ailing Californians, depend on for their medicine.
The Justice
Department views the suit as a simple case of state law tangling with the
supremacy of federal law. "The issue is not the medical use of marijuana,"
U.S. Attorney Michael Yamaguchi has said. "It’s about the persistent
violation of federal law."
But as mayor
of a city that has seen more than its share of people suffering and dying
from AIDS, I know that’s not the end of the issue. The debate over
medical marijuana is, above all else, about compassion for people in pain.
Enforcing a
law for its own sake can still cause unintended harm to innocent persons.
The closure of cannabis patient clubs would force individuals like Dixie
to suffer needless agony. Many will be compelled to buy their medicine
the streets. This would endanger their lives and place undue burden
on local law enforcement whose time would be better spent pursuing
real criminals , not patients.
A kind compromise
In San Francisco
and in cities across the California, local health and police officials,
have worked with medical marijuana dispensaries to ensure that they operate
in the spirit of the law. Controls have been encouraged and implemented
to guard against abuse, including the use of standardized medical forms
from doctors and photo identification cards certifying legitimate patients.
The current system
isn’t perfect. But until marijuana is approved by the Federal Drug
Administration as a prescription drug, California’s medical marijuana dispensaries
are a viable medical alternative. Many of the tens of thousands of
patients who use marijuana do so often as a last resort when all other
prescribed medicines have failed , or produce side effects that cancel
out their benefits.
Rather than
censure this public health crisis with a lawsuit, the Justice Department
should urge the Clinton Administration to work with local and state governments
to implement a plan for distributing medical marijuana that complies with
federal and state law and puts patients first.
The California
Senate is reviewing a bill to establish a task force that would research
and make recommendations about the safe and affordable distribution of
marijuana to patients in medical need. In December, the White House
Office of National Drug Control Policy is expected to release the results
of a study that will report on marijuana’s medical effectiveness.
These initiatives are promising, but the process will take time.
In the interim, the federal government
should impose a moratorium on enforcement of marijuana laws that interfere
with the locally regulated operation of cannabis patient clubs and allow
patients access to their medicine.
>Willie L. Brown Jr. Is the mayor of San Francisco.
How to voice your opinion
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