Candidates Rip Medical Marijuana Regulation

Jim Finnel

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
CA - Democratic candidates for state attorney general yesterday took varying positions on the merits of legalizing marijuana, but agreed that medical marijuana needs to be much more heavily regulated than it is now.

Assemblyman Ted Lieu of Torrance said he opposes legalization. Assemblyman Alberto Torrico of Fremont and Chris Kelly, chief privacy officer for Facebook, said any discussion of legalization is premature until the medical marijuana industry is reined in. Assemblyman Pedro Nava of Santa Barbara said he is “agnostic” on the subject.

The four, along with Los Angeles City Councilwoman Janice Hahn, a Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor, spoke at a forum sponsored by the San Diego County Democratic Party, North County Democratic Unity, the Cal State San Marcos Democratic Club, the Escondido Democratic Club and the North County Young Democrats.

Petition signatures for an initiative that would legalize and tax the sale of marijuana in California have been submitted to the Secretary of State’s Office, and the measure appears to have a good chance of qualifying for the November ballot.

California voters legalized marijuana for medicinal purposes with Proposition 215 in 1996, and all four candidates for attorney general agree that it has gotten out of hand.

“There are more marijuana dispensaries in Los Angeles than there are Starbucks,” Kelly said.

Torrico and Nava said some medicinal marijuana has been found to have more than 100 times the allowable levels of pesticides and other toxins.

All a person has to do to obtain marijuana is have a written “recommendation,” as opposed to a prescription, from a doctor who is often associated with the dispensary, Lieu said. The recommendation doesn’t have to specify the quantity or duration of use, he said.

“We know lots of people are getting it, not for medical reasons; they’re doing it for recreation,” Lieu said.

Nava called Proposition 215 “vague and ambiguous” and “a corruption of what was a good idea.” The Santa Barbara legislator blamed an initiative process that allows any citizen to file a proposed law without it being vetted by legal experts.

“Where we are hobbled is when laws are passed by an initiative and it’s three drunk guys sitting around a table writing on a napkin,” Nava said.

The four candidates are seeking the Democratic nomination for the office Attorney General Jerry Brown is expected to relinquish to run for governor, though he has yet to formally announce his intentions. Also in the Democratic race are former Los Angeles City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo and San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris.

Republican candidates are Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve Cooley, attorney John Eastman and state Sen. Tom Harman of Huntington Beach.

Hahn, one of three potential Democratic candidates for lieutenant governor, said she would use the office to fight for reductions in tuition at public colleges and universities. The lieutenant governor serves on the University of California Board of Regents and the California State University board of trustees.

“You don’t balance the budget in Sacramento on students and their parents,” said Hahn, the daughter of the late Los Angeles County Supervisor Kenneth Hahn and sister of former Los Angeles Mayor Jim Hahn.

State Sen. Dean Florez of Shafter is also in the Democratic race for lieutenant governor, and San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, who abandoned his campaign for governor last year, has said he may run.

The office has been vacant since November, when Democratic Lt. Gov. John Garamendi was elected to Congress in a special election. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger nominated Republican Abel Maldonado, a state senator from Santa Maria, to fill the vacancy.

Whether or not he is confirmed by the Legislature, Maldonado is running for the Republican nomination, as is Sen. Sam Aanestad of Grass Valley.


NewsHawk: User: 420 Magazine - Cannabis Culture News & Reviews
Source: signonsandiego.com
Author: John Marelius
Copyright: 2010 The San Diego Union-Tribune, LLC
Contact: Contact Us
Website: Candidates rip medical marijuana regulation - SignOnSanDiego.com
 
Don't foget the thugs come election day. They want more legislation and control where the Californian voters have already voted for less control.
 
I'm for the three drunk guys putting the initiative on a paper napkin. Could you imagine what would happen if it were vetted by experts. Nothing would ever pass.
 
“We know lots of people are getting it, not for medical reasons; they’re doing it for recreation,” Lieu said.

Here we go again. They believe that millions are not already smoking it recreationally, and that making it tougher on medical users, the ones for whom it is a great benefit, will somehow effect the recreational use of pot. How stupid are these people?

OK so they make it tougher to get a medical card and what happens. A small percentage will no longer be able to get a card, the black market and importers continue to thrive in a "business as usual" environment.

It has been easy enough to get what you want pretty much whenever you want - even if illegal.

I'm all for the 3 drunks setting policy, as long as they're drinking and passing a fatty around.

There are a lot of things that were not taken into consideration when medical marijuana legalization was first enacted because it was all new and nobody knew what to expect. Distribution? Sources? The Stink! (some of this stuff really does reek). These things should be addressed by state legislature so individual communities can't muck around with the intent of the law and personal prejudices do not enter the picture.

We have city councils setting rules and regulations saying, quite often, "Sure, it is legal, but WE don't want you to do that here". Legislators saying "Well, I don't think it does anything for pain," mostly out of sheer ignorance and without a Doctorate in any School of Medicine.

There I go ... rambling again.
 
What gets me is how every politicians fall back on nixonian politics and has to get tough on marijuana = tough on crime?. Are they that insulated there at the top not to know that the politics of marijuana have changed? The voters didn't vote in medical marijuana legalization for no reason at all. Someone needs to break the trend, and show that being pro marijuana will get you elected.
 
"There are more marijuana dispensaries in Los Angeles than there are Starbucks," Kelly said.

Ignorance and stupidity rule the roost. Shows how much they pay attention. Come on! Using the same old talking points. I guess coffee is a drug too but there are more liquor stores then there are coffee shops, pharmacies, and dispensaries combined. All of them need an education.
 
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