Rhode Island Moves Toward Pot Purchasing

Ms. RedEye

420 Support
420 Staff
PROVIDENCE, R.I. -- Bobby Ebert says he learned a painful lesson about the shortcomings of Rhode Island's medical marijuana program when a group of teenagers beat him as he tried to buy the drug two years ago.

Rhode Island was the 11th state in the county to allow chronically ill patients to use marijuana for pain relief, but there remains a major problem: buying the drug remains illegal under state law. Trying to fix the legal limbo, the state Senate on Wednesday voted 35-2 to approve a bill permitting three nonprofit stores to sell marijuana to patients registered with the state. It now heads to House lawmakers.

The goal is to give patients like Ebert, who smokes marijuana to alleviate the nauseating side effects of HIV medication and back pain, an alternative to buying from dangerous street dealers.

"This isn't the way to acquire medicine," said Ebert, 50, who never reported his attack to the police. "You know what the cops are going to say? They're going to laugh at you."

More than 680 patients including Ebert have enrolled in Rhode Island's medical marijuana program since it began in 2006, according to health officials.

Patients suffering from conditions including chronic pain, severe nausea, seizures, multiple sclerosis or Alzheimer's disease can register with the state for permission to possess up to 12 marijuana plants and 2.5 ounces of the drug in a usable form. The sale and use of marijuana remains illegal under federal law.

Legislation sponsored by Sen. Rhoda Perry and Rep. Thomas Slater, both Democrats from Providence, would allow the state to license three "compassion centers" permitted to sell the drug to registered patients. Perry called the lack of a legal distribution center a major problem for patients.

"They're purchasing it illegally," she said. "There are dangers. There have been several cases where patients have gotten into a scuffle with sellers."

Sen. Paul Jabour voted against the bill, saying he worried it offered too little oversight, could encourage illegal drug dealing and complicate police officers' jobs.

"It just opens too many doors for activity that still to this day in the state of Rhode Island is not legal," Jabour said after the vote. "I'm sure there are actual people out there that see the passage of this bill, although well intended, as an opportunity for some economic gain and profit."

Gov. Don Carcieri, a Republican, is expected to veto the bill if it passes. Perry's bill was supported by well over the 60 percent of lawmakers needed to overturn a veto.

Carcieri has not taken a position on Perry's bill, said his spokeswoman, Amy Kempe. But the governor has repeatedly vetoed bills creating or expanding the state's medical marijuana program, saying it promotes illegal drug use and puts patients at risk of being prosecuted under federal law.

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder recently announced that President Barack Obama's administration would not target marijuana dispensers that follow state law, an announcement that Perry believes could ease the concerns of some state lawmakers in Rhode Island.

Former President George Bush's administration targeted medical marijuana dispensaries in California even if they complied with that state's medical marijuana law.

Under Perry's bill, Rhode Island officials would take into account a facility's security plans and the feelings of the host community before allowing a marijuana store to operate.

The stores would be subject to state inspection.

The Senate passed a similar version of Perry's bill last year, but House lawmakers opted instead to create a commission to study ways of distributing marijuana to medical patients. Carcieri vetoed the commission and killed the plan.


News Hawk: MsRedEye: 420 MAGAZINE ® - Medical Marijuana Publication & Social Networking
Source: ConnPost.com
Author: Ray Henry
Copyright: 2009 Hearst Communications
Contact: Feedback - The Connecticut Post Online
Website: R.I. moves toward pot purchasing - The Connecticut Post Online
 
Sen. Paul jabour really angers me. God forbid that when laws change, citizens seize this new opportunity for some economic gain or profit, In a FREE MARKET ECONOMY! He is worried that more illegal drug dealers will start up operation, or worse, people open legal dispensaries as an entrepenuristic method of gaining money in a capitalistic country which bases itself on it's free market.

Great coverage, thanks for the stories. I just wish that peope in power would open their eyes and accept that weed won't destroy the country.
 
Back
Top Bottom