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THE NORML |
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. . . a weekly service for the media on news items related to marijuana
prohibition.
January 2, 1998
Canadian Federal Health Agency Says It's Ready To
Approve Limited Use Of Medical Marijuana
Proposal May License Toronto University To Grow The Drug For "Emergency"
Purposes
January 2, 1998, Toronto, Ontario:
The Canadian Department of Health appears ready and willing to approve the use of
marijuana as a legal medicine in "emergency" situations, the Ottawa Citizen
reported on December 19, 1997. As a result, University of Toronto professor Dr.
Diane Riley is lobbying for permission to begin growing the drug at the school's
year-round greenhouse.
"There is no problem, basically, with
marijuana as a medicine," said Health Canada spokesman Dann Michols.
"Marijuana is no different than morphine, no different than Aspirin."
Michols explained that physicians who wish to prescribe marijuana may apply to
Health Canada's Emergency
Drug Release Program, and must present evidence that marijuana is therapeutically
beneficial to a particular patient. In addition, Michols said that physicians must
also provide the agency with the name of the drug's federally approved
"manufacturer." However, no licensed institution is presently growing
marijuana, he said.
Enter Dr. Riley, whose proposal would authorize
the University of Toronto to grow marijuana for medical use. "I think Health
Canada is implying that they are ready to let people have access to marijuana as
medicine," she said. "I'd like to see a situation where physicians ...
could come to U of T and say: 'We need access to your marijuana.' ... I've worked
with AIDS people and I know marijuana can help them."
Michols said that there is "a good
chance" his agency will approve Dr. Riley's plan if she gets permission from the
university to grow marijuana. He said approval could come within a month.
"I've done some preliminary investigations
at the U of T [and] ... I get the sense that they would be favorable toward doing
it," Riley said. "It shouldn't be a problem."
Presently, California state Senator John
Vasconcellos (D-Santa Clara) is lobbying the legislature to authorize a similar proposal
in that state. Senate Bill 535, introduced by Vasconcellos in 1997 and held over
until this year, seeks to establish a Medical Marijuana Research center at a campus of the
University of California. The center would grow marijuana for scientific medical
trials.
For more information, please contact either
Paul Armentano or Allen St. Pierre of The NORML Foundation @ (202)
483-8751.
France Approves Experimental Use Of Medical Marijuana, Anticipates Eliminating Criminal Penalties For Recreational Use
January 2, 1998: Paris, France:
French health ministry officials announced that the government will begin
conducting medical marijuana trials in a limited number of hospitals this year. The
announcement came at the conclusion of a two-day national conference on drug policy, held
at the health ministry last December.
Officials also announced that the federal
government will begin serious debate on merits of marijuana decriminalization. More
than 200 doctors, drug experts, scientists, teachers, and social workers who attended the
conference recommended that the government abolish criminal penalties for possession of
small quantities of marijuana, The London Independent reported.
"French criminal penalties for marijuana
are presently some of the most severe in Western Europe," said Allen St. Pierre,
Executive Director of The NORML Foundation. "This apparent
relaxing of the marijuana laws for medical and recreational use indicates that France may
be falling in line with the more enlightened, harm reduction-based policies shared by most
of its neighboring countries."
Although government officials doubt that the
panel's recommendations will immediately lead to a formal change in the nation's drug
laws, spokesmen did announce that administrative changes regarding drug-law enforcement
could take place. "We can act ... without waiting for a change in the
law," Health Minister Bernard Kouchner said. Kouchner also said that he favored
prescriptive access for marijuana.
Ministry officials also announced that the
government has commissioned a scientific study to better compare the relative dangers of
legal and illegal drug use.
For more information, please contact Allen
St. Pierre of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751.
Ontario Farmers Anticipate Planting Commercial Hemp Plots This Spring
January 2, 1998, Sarnia, Ontario:
Proposed regulations released by Canadian Health Minister Allan Rock may open the
door for widescale hemp farming in southwest Ontario this spring. Local politicians,
who lobbied on behalf of the regulations, said they expect the language to be finalized in
time for the spring planting season.
"Hopefully, the regulations will be in
place and we'll be ready to grow by the first of March," said MP Paul Steckle
(L-Huron-Bruce).
At least one regional company anticipates that
the approved regulations will allow them to contract farmers to cultivate thousands of
hectares of the plant. "We're hoping for a couple of thousands acres this ...
year," said Jean LePrise of Kenex Ltd. "There is lots of interest.
We have 300 to 400 [farmers] signed up wanting acreage."
Over the past few years, Canada has licensed a
limited number of farmers to cultivate small test plots of industrial hemp for research
purposes. The forthcoming regulations will allow farmers to grow commercial plots of
the crop for the first time in 50 years.
According to a preliminary draft of the
regulations published in The Canada Gazette, anyone growing, processing, or
exporting hemp must possess a license from Health Canada. The regulations also
mandate that farmers may not grow the crop within one kilometer of school grounds or any
public place frequented by persons under eighteen years of age. Industrial hemp must
be stored in a locked container or location, and samples of crop have to be tested at a
laboratory to determine THC content.
For more information, please contact either
Allen St. Pierre or Paul Armentano of The NORML Foundation @ (202)
483-8751. Text of the regulations is available on the Health Canada website at: http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hpb-dgps/therapeut/drhtmeng/hemp.html.
DEA Temporarily Ceases Threats To Subpeona Names Of Marijuana Book Buyers
January 2, 1998, Washington, D.C.:
Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) officials are backing off attempts to
subpoena the names of individuals who purchased a marijuana cultivation book. The
agency withdrew its demands after legal challenges from the American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU), and an acknowledgment from Assistant U.S. Attorney John Stevens that the subpeonas
were "unduly burdensome."
Ronin Publishing Inc. of Berkeley, California,
and a gardening specialty store in Tempe, Arizona, both received subpoenas in October to
reveal the identities of Arizona residents who bought Marijuana Hydroponics: High-Tech
Water Culture. The Arizona store was also requested to turn over the names of
customers who purchased grow lights, fans, and certain fertilizers.
ACLU lawyer Nick Hentoff chastised the DEA for
initiating legal action in this case. "This was a fishing expedition by the DEA
to see who they could go after," he said.
For more information, please call either
Allen St. Pierre of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751 or Dale
Gieringer of California NORML @ (415) 563-5858.
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