Lawmaker Sponsers Bills Loosening Medical-Marijuana Regulations

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Lawmaker Sponsors Bills Loosening Medical-Marijuana Regulations

But life isn't always that easy for participants in the state's medical-marijuana program, prompting freshman Rep. Joe Bertram to sponsor four bills loosening marijuana regulation. Some travelers have had their pot confiscated; others have been arrested.

Hawaii is one of 12 states allowing the medical use of marijuana.

Current law, enacted in 2000, requires patients to get a doctor to complete a certification form, which is then filed with the Narcotics Enforcement Division of the state Department of Public Safety. Doctors may prescribe marijuana for "debilitating" medical conditions such as cancer, glaucoma, HIV, AIDS, severe weakness, malnutrition, weight loss, severe pain, severe nausea, seizures and muscle spasms, including those of multiple sclerosis or Crohn's disease.

The law limits patients to no more than three mature marijuana plants, four immature marijuana plants and three ounces of usable marijuana on hand at any one time.

Bertram, D-Makena, Wailea, Kihei, acknowledges that passing pot laws might be difficult in an election year. But at an informational session Wednesday of the House Health Committee, Bertram said he has high hopes the bills will get a favorable hearing because it's time to take the state's laws to the next level.

"Hawaii was a leader, used to be as far as really being on the forefront of progressive issues, but we're falling behind," Bertram said. "I think this is the year. There are a lot of people concerned about where this legislation is going to go."

Participants at the informational meeting included experts on California's medical-marijuana law, court-qualified cannabis expert and curator of the Hash-Marijuana-Hemp Museum in Amsterdam Chris Conrad, representatives of the Drug Policy Forum of Hawaii and medical-marijuana users.

Bills that Bertram is proposing will:

. Increase allowable marijuana supply to 12 plants and seven ounces at any given time. A separate bill would increase the limit to a 10-foot-by-10-foot garden canopy and three pounds of dried cannabis bud or concentrate per year.

. Honor out-of-state medical marijuana cards

. Create a committee to evaluate other conditions allowing medical-marijuana use

. Simplify the registration process

. Require law enforcement agencies to pay fair market value for any confiscated pot that is not returned

. Require the Department of Health to establish a pilot project on Maui growing up to 98 plants in a secure facility where patients can lease space for marijuana crops.

. Create a University of Hawaii research grant to study the medical efficacy of marijuana and different forms of delivery

"We have to make it available for people right now," Bertram said. "It's inexcusable not to."

Most of the state's medical marijuana production is on the Big Island. But Rep. Joshua Green, D-Kona, a medical doctor and chairman of the Health Committee, is keeping his distance from the legislation.

"Some chronic illnesses require creative treatment such as medical marijuana, especially if it will decrease the amount of narcotics being taken," Green said. "But as a health chairman, I have to be mindful of abuse of the system as well. I have my vice chairman looking into it."


Source: West Hawaii Today
Copyright: 2007 West Hawaii Todat
Contact: wht@aloha.net
Website: West Hawaii Today
 
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