Posted: Aug 24, 2010 5:11 PM by Montana's News Station
HELENA - The Montana Legislature committee tasked with addressing the state's medical marijuana law have voted to approve several proposed changes.
The committee voted 7-1 in favor of the changes, with only MT State Representative Mary Caferro of Helena voting against the proposal.
Among the highlights of the proposal:
- Requires two doctors to certify marijuana prescriptions for patients with chronic pain
- Increases the allowable amount of marijuana from one ounce to two ounces
- Limits caregivers to serving no more than five cardholders
- Restricts local governments from prohibiting medical marijuana
- Prohibits the use of medical marijuana in schools and non-hospice healthcare facilities
The proposal will be taken up during the next session of the Montana Legislature.
(August 23, 2010) Montana lawmakers on Monday discussed plans to make it tougher to get a medical marijuana card.
After a summer's worth of work, the proposed bill is tightening up and cracking down, all of it in response to a rapidly-growing medical marijuana community.
MT State Representative Diane Sands of Missoula noted, "The intention of this group was to honor the intention as best we understand it from all of our various meetings and input what the public thought it was voting for."
But the question many have been asking in recent months is what did voters approve when they legalized medical marijuana? For each stakeholder, the answer is different.
Brad Comer, who is both a caregiver and a patient, said, "We are talking about medical marijuana - we didn't vote for a recreational law. If we had, tax us, limit us do what you need to do, but we voted for a medicine.
While the medical marijuana community says the proposed changes are too strict, the Montana Medical Association says it still leaves questions unanswered. Erin MacLean of the MMA said, "Once the patients leave the physician's hand, the physicians have no control over dosage or quality of what is being called by the state now a medicine."
The bill draft requires a two doctor certification for patients with chronic pain, and increases the allowable amount from one ounce to two ounces.
The draft also limits caregivers to serve no more than five cardholders, which for businesses whose only source of income is selling marijuana, has the potential of shutting them down.
Charlton Campbell, a medical marijuana caregiver, said, "The state hasn't had the opportunity to see the huge benefits of persons like myself running this as a small business, giving us the opportunity to employ people, giving us the opportunity to add to the tax revenues."
The draft also restricts local governments from prohibiting medical marijuana; Billings City Attorney Brent Brooks said, "The mayor and city council of Billings would like to have prohibition as an option."
Despite mixed feelings, legislators want to get the holes in the current legislation plugged.
MT State Representative Rick Laible of Darby said, "I think it addresses some of the unintended consequences that the legislation has provided."
The committee will vote on the bill draft tomorrow; if passed, it will then go before the full Legislature when the next session begins.
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