GIVING A GRACELESS OKAY TO MEDICAL MARIJUANA

T

The420Guy

Guest
Like a recalcitrant teenager ordered to do her homework or lose her TV
privileges, Health Minister Anne McLellan has waited until the last
possible moment to make medical marijuana available to Canadians, as
directed by the courts. She and her department have dragged their feet in a
number of ways over the past few years, trying to avoid this decision --
arguing that the medical benefits of marijuana are inconclusive and that
the product delivered by a contractor didn't meet quality tests (if only
all dealers were so conscientious). Now, they can delay no longer.

Yesterday marked the deadline set by Ontario Superior Court Justice Sidney
Lederman in January, when he ruled that Ottawa's regulations on access to
medical marijuana were unconstitutional. In effect, he said the government
had placed terminal cancer patients, people with AIDS, epileptics and
others in a Catch-22: It was legal to use marijuana for medical purposes,
but there was no legal way to get it. "Laws which put seriously ill,
vulnerable people in a position where they have to deal with the criminal
underworld to obtain medicine they have been authorized to take violate the
constitutional right to security of the person," he wrote.

Ottawa's record on this issue is not something to be proud of. It is a
cavalcade of misinformation, lame excuses, delaying tactics and outright
obstinacy that goes back more than six years.

In the original 1997 ruling involving epileptic marijuana user Terry
Parker, an Ontario court ruled that federal marijuana laws violated Mr.
Parker's constitutional rights.

Ottawa appealed the ruling, and lost. Three years ago, an appeal court gave
the government a year to exempt medical users.

Ottawa adopted the regulations on access to medical marijuana, which set
out the requirements a patient would have to meet to use marijuana legally.
Then-health-minister Allan Rock contracted with a grower in Flin Flon,
Man., to produce marijuana in an abandoned mine for clinical research and
medical use. Since Ms. McLellan took over, however, the process has ground
to a virtual halt. There has been no medical supply from the mine, because
of a series of issues raised by the department, including the potency of
the supply and the question of whether there was enough for clinical
research and medical use.

In his January ruling, Judge Lederman gave the government six months to
provide access to legal marijuana.

And what did the department do? It devoted most of its efforts to an appeal.

Last month, the Ontario Court of Appeal refused to suspend the ruling,
saying Judge Lederman had postponed the date on which his decision would
take effect "to enable something to be done, not to enable an appeal to be
completed." Finally, at the 12th hour, Health Canada announced that about
1,650 packets of marijuana were ready to be shipped and that the 582
patients who are entitled to use it could have theirs within a week.

Ms. McLellan is clearly doing so under protest, however.

Even as it announced its plan, Health Canada warned that "this interim
policy can be amended or suspended at any time," and it is still appealing
the Lederman ruling. The minister argues that marijuana has not been shown
to have medical benefits; but it has not been shown to have any
life-threatening effects, either.

If patients who are terminally or chronically ill believe that it eases
their pain, and the courts have agreed that they should be provided with
it, why has the Health Minister done everything she can to deny them that
right?

It's a shame the government had to be dragged kicking and screaming into
complying with a legal decision rendered six years ago, and that Ms.
McLellan seems determined to dig her heels in until the bitter end.


Pubdate: Thu, 10 Jul 2003
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Page: A16
Copyright: 2003, The Globe and Mail Company
Contact: letters@globeandmail.ca
Website: The Globe and Mail: Canadian, World, Politics and Business News & Analysis
 
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