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Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Activism Alert:

The Oklahoma Compassionate Care Campaign for medical marijuana is making great progress. Our goal is to change state law, to allow doctors to recommend medical marijuana. This would include regulations for cultivation and distribution. In fact, the final version of the proposed legislation for legalizing medical marijuana for Oklahoma can be viewed here, following detailing of plans for a "Day at the Capitol" to present this proposed legislation.

We have received written endorsements from more than forty potential Oklahoma medical marijuana patients and three Oklahoma medical professionals (one Medical Doctor (M.D.), one Registered Nurse (R.N.). and a pain therapist.). Early in 2010 (date TBA), we will have a medical marijuana lobbying day at the State Capitol. We will visit our elected officials in person and ask them to support medical marijuana.

Please call, email, fax and/or write letters to your Oklahoma senator and representative today! Ask them to - Please introduce and endorse The Oklahoma Compassionate Care Medical Marijuana Legislation. The campaign has a tiny budget. We need your contributions to afford more publicity. We need volunteers to help with a wide range of activities. With your help, we can build a strong statewide coalition for medical marijuana. Your active participation is the most important contribution of all. To endorse this campaign or get more information contact: 405-714-1236 or E-mail. Endorsements may also be made here on this web site. Drug Policy Reform Nework of Oklahoma

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Maine Voters Approve Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

Voters in Maine Tuesday approved Question 5, the Maine Medical Marijuana Act, an initiative instructing the state government to set up a system of state-licensed medical marijuana dispensaries. The measure passed with 59% of the vote.

http://stopthedrugwar.org/files/maineplea.jpg
a plea from a patient — Maine voters listened (courtesy mainecommonsense.org)

Sponsored by Maine Citizens for Patient Rights (MCPR) and the Maine Medical Marijuana Policy Initiative (MMMPI), and funded primarily by the Drug Policy Alliance, the Maine Medical Marijuana Act will:

  • Establish a system of nonprofit dispensaries which would be overseen and tightly regulated by the state;
  • Establish a voluntary identification card for medical marijuana patients and caregivers;
  • Protect patients and caregivers from arrest, search and seizure unless there is suspicion of abuse;
  • Create new protections for qualified patients and providers in housing, education, employment and child custody;
  • Allow patients with Lou Gehrig’s disease and Alzheimer’s disease access to medical marijuana;
  • Require the Department of Health and Human Services to develop a procedure for expanding the list of conditions for which marijuana can be used; and
  • Keep current allowable marijuana quantities at 2.5 ounces and six plants.

“We weren’t surprised at all by the outcome,” said Jonathan Leavitt of Maine Citizens for Patients Rights, who had predicted weeks ago the measure would cruise to victory. “We would have done a lot better in most elections, but this time there was a big turnout from the hard-core religious right,” he said, referring to the heated battle over a gay marriage referendum that went down to defeat the same day.

“We’re really tickled,” said Bruce Mirken, communications director for the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP), which also supported the campaign. “This was a state election with some controversial issues, but medical marijuana wasn’t one of them. Oh, the usual suspects objected, but nobody was listening. This suggests the comfort level with medical marijuana is growing by leaps and bounds.”

Some long-time Maine marijuana activists, such as the Maine Vocals, had joined the “usual suspects” in opposing the measure. They argued that the measure gave too much power to the state. But their complaints appeared to have little impact on the electoral outcome.

“It’s great to see Maine leapfrog other states in adopting cutting-edge medical marijuana legislation,” said Jill Harris, DPA managing director for public policy. “What’s especially nice is that the medical marijuana guidelines recently issued by the US Department of Justice provide reassurance to Maine officials that they can implement the new law without fear of reprisal by federal authorities.”

“This is a dramatic step forward, the first time that any state’s voters have authorized the state government to license medical marijuana dispensaries,” said MPP executive director Rob Kampia. “Coming a decade after passage of Maine’s original marijuana law, this is a huge sign that voters are comfortable with these laws, and also a sign that the recent change of policy from the Obama administration is having a major impact.”

Maine becomes the sixth state to allow medical marijuana dispensaries, and, as Kampia noted, the first one to approve state-licensed dispensaries through a popular vote. New Mexico and Rhode Island approved state-licensed dispensaries through the legislative process, while California, Colorado, and Washington adopted locally-approved dispensaries through the initiative process.

In New Mexico, there is currently one state-licensed medical marijuana dispensary; in Rhode Island none yet exist. In Colorado, by contrast, there are nearly a hundred, while in California, the number of locally-permitted (or not) dispensaries is somewhere shy of 2000. In Washington State, the number of dispensaries is much lower, but still higher than in states where dispensaries are licensed by the state.

“The trend toward licensed dispensaries is a good thing,” said Kris Hermes, communications director for Americans for Safe Access, the nation’s largest medical marijuana advocacy group. “Back in 1996, when the first initiative was passed in California, that initiative included language calling on the state and federal governments to work together to create a plan for distribution. But because the federal government was not only unhelpful, but actually working to actively undermine medical marijuana distribution in California during the Bush years, people at the local level were forced to develop a model they could advance. What we now have in California is a local model of distribution,” he noted.

While locally-approved dispensaries appear to provide access to medical marijuana to greater numbers of people, they are also subject to more harassment and even prosecution by the state or even the federal government. The Obama administration has declared it will not go after dispensaries operating in accord with state law, but in states like California and Colorado, where local prosecutors determine legality — not a state law — dispensary operators could still see themselves prosecuted by the feds.

One such incident occurred in September in San Diego, where hard-line county District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis led joint state and federal raids against dispensaries, and at least two people were charged with federal marijuana distribution offenses. Similarly, the Los Angeles county prosecutor has warned that he considers almost all LA-area dispensaries to be illegal.

“That’s the fundamental difference Maine, New Mexico, and Rhode Island on one hand, and California and Colorado on the other,” said MPP’s Mirken. “The latter have a large number of dispensaries, but they are operating in a grey area. In California, we’ve seen the feds justify participating in raids where local DAs say the dispensaries aren’t legal.”

That could continue to happen, even with the Obama edict, Mirken said. “Until the courts settle these issues, it’s not shocking that the feds might defer to local prosecutors,” he said. “There’s something to be said for legal clarity.”

What is needed, said Hermes, is federal acceptance of medical marijuana. “As long as the federal government continues to deny medical marijuana’s efficacy and refuses to develop a national plan that goes beyond law enforcement, states will have to develop their own laws to deal with the issue of distribution,” he said. “Having said that, we continue to work with the Obama administration to develop that national policy, and hopefully, one day soon we will have a policy that obviates the need for individual policies at the state level.”

In the meantime, it’s up to the states. In Maine, that means getting the state-licensed dispensary system up and running. “The process starts when the governor signs it into law, which we expect shortly,” said Leavitt. “He will then set up a task force to pull together appropriate oversight for the new law. We hope to be part of that stakeholder process. I think it will take at least three or four months before we actually have functioning dispensaries.”

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