This Blog is about Cannabis, marijuana, weed, ganja.
Wednesday, 25 March 2015
Bill to legalize medical marijuana introduced in the House
ByJake Miller
A bipartisan effort to legalize medical marijuana at the
federal level is now underway in both Houses of Congress, and its
sponsors acknowledge they face an uphill climb to passage - but they
believe the public is on their side.
"Polls show that at least 86
percent of Americans say medical marijuana should be available," said
Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tennessee, in an interview with CBS News.
"Legislators rarely lead, they generally follow. I guess it's called cultural lag...Eventually, people in Congress start catching up."
Cohen
and Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, unveiled a bill on Tuesday that would
reclassify marijuana as a Schedule II narcotic, recognizing some
appropriate medical uses for the drug. Marijuana is legal for medical
use in 23 states and the District of Columbia, but the federal
government currently classifies pot as a Schedule I narcotic with no
apparent medical utility.
The reclassification would have a variety of effects on how the
federal government enforces marijuana laws.
It would allow states to
set their own medical marijuana statutes free of federal interference,
allow medical marijuana dispensaries to access the banking system, and
allow doctors at government agencies like the Department of Veterans
Affairs to prescribe medical marijuana in states where it's permitted.
It could also jumpstart research into the drug's medical uses.
The
bill is the House version of the Senate's Compassionate Access,
Research Expansion, and Respect States (CARERS) Act, which was introduced earlier this month by Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-New York, Cory Booker, D-New Jersey, and Rand Paul, R-Kentucky.
Supporters
have framed the bill as a common-sense way to bring real relief to
suffering people. Cohen cited alternative forms of the drug like
cannabidiol (CBD), a marijuana derivative that has no psychoactive
effects but has been shown to provide relief to children with seizures.
That
treatment isn't available to people in states that prohibit medical
marijuana, and "it's cruel and it's heartless," said Cohen, citing the
experience of a 3-year-old Tennessee girl, Chloe Grauer, who died last
year of a rare neurological disorder after she was denied access to CBD.
"People are waking up to the fact that we ought to use whatever we have
to help people when they're sick."
The congressman reserved particularly harsh criticism for the
fact that VA doctors aren't allowed to prescribe medical marijuana to
veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder and other maladies.
"
VA Doctors should not be muzzled," he said. "The idea that veterans who
go to war and see life squashed out can't talk to doctors about
marijuana is absurd. It's crazy."
The effort has even drawn some
support from the GOP, which has traditionally taken a harder line on
drug laws. "The topic of medical and recreational marijuana has always
been an issue of state' rights for me," Young, the Alaska Republican,
said in a press release on Tuesday. "My position aims to reaffirm the
states' rights to determine the nature of criminal activity within their
own jurisdictions, which I believe is critical for states to
effectively legislate within their borders."
Cohen credited the
veterans' health care angle for drawing GOP attention to the issue, and
he said Young, a "respected veteran legislator," may give more
Republicans a "little bit of courage" and persuade them to sign on. He
acknowledged that a rising strain of libertarianism in today's GOP,
particularly among lawmakers from Western states, may also boost the
measure's support.
In addition to Young, Cohen said, Rep. Dana
Rohrabacher, R-California, has agreed to sponsor the measure. He also
said he'd talked to two additional Republicans on Tuesday who appeared
ready to join the fight.
Some Democrats, like Sen. Dianne
Feinstein, D-California, have voiced concerns about the increased
potency of modern marijuana, saying they'd like to see more research
into the non-psychoactive forms of the drug.
Cohen has little
patience for that particular reservation. "It's just horse manure to
talk about potent versus less potent," he said. "If you make it legal,
people might know the potency of what they're buying."
Despite
some signs of momentum, the bill faces an tough road to passage in a
GOP-controlled Congress. Asked whether House Speaker John Boehner would
schedule a vote on the bill if it receives enough support, Cohen said,
"I doubt it." Even moving the bill through the House Judiciary
Committee, which holds jurisdiction over the issue, would be "tough," he
said.
But the congressman argued that the bill's eventual success
is guaranteed, given the generational shift toward more permissive
attitudes on pot laws.
"One day, there will be passage," he said. "The times, they are a-changin'."
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