GOLISANO: LEGALIZE MEDICAL MARIJUANA

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The420Guy

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Gubernatorial candidate B. Thomas Golisano is proposing that the state
legalize medical marijuana for terminally and seriously ill patients.

Golisano scheduled a press conference Wednesday in Albany to announce his
plans. An ad began running Tuesday night in New York City that knocks Gov.
George Pataki for not approving the law, saying heis beholden to
pharmaceutical companies opposed to it.

"Doctors, not politicians, should be deciding how to care for their
patients," Golisano spokesman Erick Mullen said.

Marijuana Reform Party candidate Thomas Leighton torched Golisanois plan.
iItis an act of political opportunism,i he said.

Leighton said Golisanois campaign asked him last week for assistance in
putting together the ads. Leighton said he didnit want to help because
Golisano doesnit seem genuine about the issue or other recent proposals,
such as free tuition for some college students and repealing the stateis
harsh drug sentencing laws.

"I think the next thing is going to be a chicken in every pot and pot with
every chicken," Leighton said.

Leighton said the Marijuana Reform Party asked Golisano months ago if he
wanted to run for governor on their line, but he declined. Mullen said he
was unaware that Golisano was asked.

Leighton said he fears Golisano could take away from the 50,000 votes
needed for the Marijuana Reform Party to remain on future ballots.

Golisano, the billionaire owner of Paychex Inc., is making a third bid for
governor on the Independence Party line, which he helped create in 1994.

That year, Golisano suggested that the state look at legalizing marijuana
and other drugs, saying the country was losing the war on drugs. Pataki,
seeking to unseat Democrat Gov. Mario Cuomo in 1994, attacked Golisano at
the time.

Golisano, however, is tempering the message this time to focus just on
medical marijuana.

Nine states give people with serious or terminal illnesses the right to use
marijuana if prescribed by a doctor. Golisanois ad says New York approved a
similar law in 1980, but no mechanisms are in place to allow for the drug's
distribution or use.

A Pataki spokesman said there is no concrete evidence that marijuana can
help patients.

"The experts at the state Department of Health are not convinced that this
is the appropriate medical response," said spokesman Bob Hinckley.

Golisano, who plans to spend $75 million or more on his self-financed
campaign, will also unveil ads later this week that knock Pataki for the
fiscal problems being faced by New York counties, Mullen said.

The ads will be regionalized to focus on tax increases that counties are
proposing because of unfunded state mandates.

Pubdate: Wed, 16 Oct 2002
Source: Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (NY)
Webpage: https://www.rochesterdandc.com/news/1016story6_news.shtml
Copyright: 2002 Rochester Democrat and Chronicle
Contact: dceditpage@democratandchronicle.com
Website: Democrat and Chronicle - Rochester news, sports, things to do in Rochester NY
 
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