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View Full Version : Medical Marijuana Bill Squeaks by House


JoyfulGirl
03-15-2001, 05:30 PM
I've been too busy at work to post this news sooner, but here it is...

13 March 2001, New Mexico

Those who want to allow patients to use marijuana to treat certain medical conditions won a slim but significant victory Monday when the state House of Representatives approved a "medical marijuana" bill.

Supporters call it the "Compassionate Use of Marijuana Act," but opponents insist the bill is a "smokescreen" for legalizing drugs.

"What kind of a message are we sending to our children?" was a rhetorical question voiced several times by the bill's opponents during the floor debate as well as at an anti-drug decriminalization rally held Monday morning in the Capitol Rotunda.

The House voted 35-32 to approve House Bill 431, sponsored by Rep. Joe Thompson, R-Albuquerque.

To that, Rep. Dan Foley, R-Roswell, responded, "What message are we sending? The right message. The message that we care about people and that we're not going to turn our back on them because of some scare tactic (by people who say) someone suffering from cancer is going to become a drug pusher because of this."

The bill is part of Gov. Gary Johnson's drug-reform package.

The vote was extremely close considering the state Senate passed a similar bill (SB319) last week by a vote of 29-12. Unlike the House vote, a majority of Senate Republicans present voted in favor of the bill.

On Monday, however, House Republicans voted 18 to 10 against the bill. Democrats voted 25 to 14 in favor of the bill.

Because both the House and Senate passed their own bill on medical marijuana, it is not clear what will happen next. If the House passes the Senate bill - or if the Senate passes the House version - that bill would go to Johnson to sign.

Because of the slim margin in the House, Foley said, the fastest way to get medical marijuana approved might be for the Senate to act on HB431.

The only major difference between the two is the "sunset clause" in the House bill.

If the House bill becomes law, the medical-marijuana program would expire in four years and the Legislature would have to approve it again for the program to continue.

Either bill would set up a program in the state Health Department to allow people suffering serious medical conditions to smoke marijuana to ease pain and nausea.

A person who thought he or she might be helped by therapeutic marijuana would consult a doctor, who would decide whether to recommend the person for the program.

The doctor would send his recommendation to the state Health Department, which would approve - or deny - the patient's participation.

A panel of nine doctors nominated by the state health secretary and approved by the Senate would oversee the medical-marijuana program. The Health Department would decide policy questions such as how the marijuana would be cultivated and distributed

As he did last week when HB431 was heard by the House Judiciary Committee, Rep. Ron Godbey, R-Cedar Crest, peppered Thompson with a series of questions.

Some of Godbey's questions were technical - such as who would pay for the photo-identification cards called for in the program. (The patient would, Thompson answered.)

One question evoked nightmarish visions of what might happen under the program: "Does this mean a patient using marijuana can go out and rape and pillage?" he asked regarding one section of the bill. (Thompson assured him this was not the case.) He asked whether a bunion could be a condition for which marijuana could be used for treatment under the bill. Thompson said that theoretically that could happen - if the nine-doctor panel concluded it was a valid treatment for bunions. "But that's highly unlikely," Thompson added. lol!!

Godbey appeared at the Rotunda rally Monday morning along with Rep. Martha Atkin, R-Rio Rancho, and Republican Sens. Ramsay Gorham of Albuquerque and Shirley Bailey of Hobbs.

Speaking before a backdrop of handmade posters reading "Just Say No" and "Marijuana is Not Medicine," Godbey said when out-of-state organizations "spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to legalize marijuana in this little state, there's got to be something wrong."

St. Theresa
03-15-2001, 05:39 PM
It boggles my mind that our society is still struggling with this. Every corner store carries medications which are chemically compounded, artificially processed pharmaceutical cash cows, some of which could cause dependence and/or overdose. Still this plant, this HERB, which can be used just as mother nature creates it, and which cannot cause dependence or overdose, is treated like the devil's geranium. What message do we send our kids when we tell them men in white coats in factories make much better medicine than nature?

JoyfulGirl
03-15-2001, 05:45 PM
You said, it St. Theresa. For the life of me, I can't understand what the big deal is.

nirak
03-15-2001, 05:46 PM
<i>"Does this mean a patient using marijuana can go out and rape and pillage?"</i>

Oh, holy fuckin' christ. Sounds like his only experience about the effects of pot was watching "reefer madness."

:P

-k

JoyfulGirl
03-15-2001, 05:48 PM
Originally posted by nirak
<i>"Does this mean a patient using marijuana can go out and rape and pillage?"</i>

Oh, holy fuckin' christ. Sounds like his only experience about the effects of pot was watching "reefer madness."

:P

-k

lmao > the only rape and pillaging going on with marijuana users is in the damn refrigerator

what can I say, our house reps aren't that bright, but it's a step in the right direction

Phill
03-15-2001, 05:51 PM
That children excuse is such bull shit. In our country right now almost 50% of children (under 18) have tried marijuana. In Amsterdam, a country where marijuana is decriminalized, there rate is less then 25%.

New Mexico is doing a lot of great things, I hope it is as successful as I think it will be. If so it may just drive other states to follow their direction:)

I'll be celebrating tonight:)

St. Theresa
03-15-2001, 06:07 PM
Blow the smoke this way, Phill...PLEASE! I feel like raping and pillaging tonight...lol.

Here's the way the news brief will look:

"A 35 year-old single mother was arrested last night for raping a twinkie. The victim was not identified but an officer at the scene said, 'The twinkie was just lying there on the floor when we arrived - cream everywhere. It was a mess.'"

CherryAllamanda
03-15-2001, 06:43 PM
Yep... me and my friends go get high behind our local store and then go out a'raping and a'pillaging... boy that wacky tobacky makes we just wanna screw the shit out of that hobo...

lol.. ok- perhaps I went a little overboard. However, I do agree with St. Theresa. Its just ridiculous.

Cherry

Spacegrrrl
03-15-2001, 06:46 PM
Someone should give them a big bong.

Isn't codeine from the opium family? Isn't that addictive? Makes no sense, yet drs. prescribe it all the time. I love the hypocracy.

Bernkastel
03-15-2001, 09:21 PM
I'm very happy for you guys :) I don't smoke it myself, but I definately think that too much is made of it being oh so evil. I think in medical cases it is very valuable.

laru
03-15-2001, 09:52 PM
i think it's absolutely ridiculous that marijuana is illegal..i think it's even more ridiculous that MEDICAL marijuana is illegal. My mother worked in a cancer clinic for 5 years..dr.'s used to recomend people use it (off the record of course) and the majority of those who used it benifited from it. Yes, there were those that it didn't help but that is true for ANY drug. I really hope this country can get past its bias and learn to do what is best for the people. But for now it's nothing but a pipe dream.

~laru