Medical Marijuana Bill Re-Introduced in Pennsylvania
PENNSYLVANIANS FOR MEDICAL MARIJUANA
May 03, 2011 - Chris Goldstein
A bill to legalize the use of medical marijuana for qualifying patients
and to create a statewide system of “Compassion Centers” has been
introduced in the Keystone State. Senator Daylin Leach brought SB 1003
forward on April 25th with Senators Larry Farnese, James Ferlo and Wayne
Fontana as the initial co-sponsors. The legislation has been referred
to the Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee.
The language
is essentially a re-introduction of a bill that was active in 2009-10 in
both houses of the General Assembly. The bill includes provisions for
home cultivation and collects the state sales tax on medical cannabis.
Last year the issue saw impressive public hearings in Harrisburg and
Pittsburgh before the House Health and Human Services Committee.
Dr.
Harry Swidler, an Emergency Medicine physician testified: “Marijuana is
non-addicting. There is no physical dependence or physical withdrawal
associated with its use. It is, from a practical standpoint, non-toxic.
Marijuana is safer by some measures than any other drug. There is simply
no known quantity of marijuana capable of killing a person.”
Renowned
forensic pathologist Dr. Cyril Wecht testified in a satellite hearing
in August 2010: "I have personally performed 17,000 autopsies and
reviewed 36,000 other postmortem protocols signed out by pathologists
throughout the United States. I have never attributed a death to
marijuana overdose, nor have I ever seen such a death certificate issued
by any coroner or medical examiner."
"I'm happy to have
re-introduced Senate Bill 1003 and am hopeful it will be brought up for
consideration by the Legislature. It is a common-sense bill that would
simply give sick people access to medication so they feel better," said
the bill's prime sponsor, Senator Daylin Leach (D). "Countless studies
show marijuana can alleviate the side effects of many diseases. It's
time we give Pennsylvanians access to the treatment they need and
deserve," Leach went on to say.
WATCH VIDEO OF TESTIMONY HERE
Advocates
at Pennsylvanians for Medical Marijuana PA4MMJ are pushing for several
changes to the bill when it gets to committee this session. These
include re-naming the bill to The Governor Raymond Shafer Compassionate
Use Medical Marijuana Act.
Just after stepping down as governor
of Pennsylvania in 1970 Shafer, a Republican, chaired a blue-ribbon
commission for President Nixon that recommended two main points: 1)
Marijuana should not be placed in Schedule I of the federal Controlled
Substances Act 2) Marijuana possession should be decriminalized at the
federal level.
Nixon ignored those suggestions and ever since the
federal government has aggressively enforced the Schedule I
classification that describes cannabis as having “…no currently accepted
medical use in treatment …” This is the reason that 15 states and the
District of Columbia have independently legalized marijuana for medical
uses.
Derek Rosenzweig at PA4MMJ in Philadelphia made this
statement today, “The best person to help a patient decide what medicine
works best is their physician. Marijuana should be available as an
option for the thousands of residents in PA dealing with terrible
medical conditions that we know cannabis can help treat.”
Patrick
Nightengale of PA4MMJ in Pittsburgh added this statement; “ We have
spoken with older citizens undergoing chemotherapy to our young warriors
returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, who have all implored us to get a
medical marijuana law passed in PA. Routinely prescribed pain
medications cause abuse, addiction and deaths everyday. We should not
criminalize the possession of a plant that has never resulted in a
single lethal overdose.”
Polling conducted by
Franklin&Marshall in 2010 showed that a striking 80 percent of
residents support passing a medical marijuana law in Pennsylvania.
To
speak with advocates, medical experts or cannabis patients in
Pennsylvania please contact Chris Goldstein, media coordinator at
PA4MMJ. media@phillynorml.org.


