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News Release |
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July 3, 1998
House Approves Spending Program To Encourage Drug
Testing
For Small Businesses
July 2, 1998, Washington, D.C.:
The House overwhelmingly approved legislation last week encouraging small
businesses to implement drug testing programs. The bill, H.R. 3853, provides grants
to non-profit advocacy organizations promoting drug-free workplaces, and encourages states
to offer financial incentive programs to encourage businesses to adopt drug testing
procedures.
"The passage of this legislation
needlessly jeopardizes the privacy rights of approximately 50 percent of the nation's
workforce," said attorney Tanya Kangas of The NORML Foundation. "Drug
testing, particularly urinalysis, is an intrusive search that lacks the ability to
determine impairment while on the job. In addition, these procedures unfairly target
marijuana smokers who may test positive for days or even weeks after the euphoric effects
of the drug have worn off."
Ninety-two percent of companies that test for
drugs use urine testing, according to the American Management Association. Many of
these are large companies that accept federal contracts and are therefore required to drug
test employees under the Federal Drug Free Workplace Act of 1988. Urine tests detect
the presence of non-psychoactive metabolites that are indicative of past use of certain
licit and illicit drugs. A positive test result, even when confirmed, does not
indicate drug abuse or addiction, recency, frequency, or amount of drug use, or
impairment.
"It is unfair to force workers who are not
even suspected of using drugs, and whose job performance is satisfactory, to 'prove' their
innocence through a degrading and uncertain procedure that violates personal
privacy," declared the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in a released statement
opposing suspicionless drug testing. "Such test are unnecessary because they
cannot detect impairment and, thus, in no way enhance an employer's ability to evaluate or
predict job performance."
Kangas added that the legislation demands
taxpayers to foot the bill on a procedure that is neither necessary nor favored by a
majority of Americans.
The House passed the measure by a vote of 402
to 9.
For more information, please contact either
Tanya Kangas or Paul Armentano of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751.
Medical Marijuana Distribution Bill Defeated In State Assembly
July 2, 1998, Sacramento, CA:
Legislation seeking to authorize local governments to establish medical marijuana
distribution programs fell two votes shy of passage in the Assembly Health Committee
Tuesday.
California NORML Coordinator Dale Gieringer
criticized the bill's defeat. "This proposal offered a comprehensive, realistic
solution to the short-term medical marijuana distribution problem," he said.
Senate Bill 1887, introduced by Sen. John
Vasconcellos (D-Santa Clara), was a response to a mandate in Proposition 215 calling on
the government to "implement a plan to provide for the safe and affordable
distribution to all patients in medical need." The measure sought to make use
of an untested provision in the federal Controlled Substances Act that immunizes local
officials who comply with local drug laws from federal sanctions.
The most vocal opposition to the bill came from
a spokesman for Attorney General's Dan Lungren's office who warned that passing the
measure would legalize cannabis buyers' clubs. Lungren has waged legal battles
against the state's medical marijuana dispensaries since 1996.
The bill also called on the federal government
to reschedule marijuana as a legal medicine. "There is widespread consensus
among physicians, law enforcement, patients, providers, and other stakeholders that the
most effective solution [to the question of medical marijuana distribution] is for the
federal government to reschedule marijuana so that it can be prescribed under the same
strict protocols as morphine and cocaine," it stated.
Voting on the bill followed party lines, but
abstention by moderate Democrats left the measure without majority support.
"It is a shame that almost two years after
the passage of Proposition 215, the California Legislature continues to stall any efforts
to implement a medical marijuana distribution system called for by a majority of state
voters," NORML Executive Director R. Keith Stroup said.
For more information, please contact either
Dale Gieringer of California NORML @ (415) 563-5858 or Keith Stroup of NORML @ (202)
483-5500.
Hemp Organization Issues Report To Counter White House Misinformation Campaign
July 2, 1998, Madison, WI:
Hemp grown for industrial purposes presents no threat to public safety and is
readily distinguishable from marijuana, according to a white paper issued by the North
American Industrial Hemp Council (NAIHC). The report, written by plant breeding
expert Dr. David West, provides a factual basis to counter common myths and misconceptions
about the plant.
"No member of the vegetable kingdom has
ever been more misunderstood than hemp," said West. "The drug enforcement
agencies, by disseminating false information, have created a mythology about Cannabis
sativa that ill serves the nation, its farmers, and its industry. ... This paper is
intended to ... offer scientific evidence so that farmers, policy makers, manufacturers,
and the general public can distinguish between myth and reality."
The report discounts theories that hemp
contains the necessary percentage of THC, the compound in marijuana that gives the plant
its euphoric effects, to get users intoxicated. "The THC levels in hemp are so
low that no one could get high from smoking it," the report concluded.
"Moreover, hemp contains a relatively high percentage of another cannabinoid,
CBD, that actually blocks the marijuana high. Hemp, as it turns out, is not only not
marijuana, it could be called 'anti-marijuana.'"
The report also counters the belief that
regulating hemp cultivation would burden local police forces. "In twenty-nine
countries where hemp is grown as an agricultural crop, the police have experienced no such
burdens," the author found. It further stated that none of the major
hemp-growing and exporting nations have ever been identified by the United States as a
drug exporting nation.
David Morris, Vice Chair of the NAIHC, said the
report is necessary to counter the "remarkable barrage of falsehoods and
half-truths" issued by the White House Office of Drug Control Policy and the Drug
Enforcement Administration.
"It is time for us as a nation to step
back, take a deep breath, and revisit the facts," he said.
The report, entitled Hemp & Marijuana:
Myths and Realities, may be ordered on-line from the NAIHC at: http://www.naihc.org.
For more information on hemp, please
contact either Allen St. Pierre or Paul Armentano of The NORML Foundation @ (202)
483-8751.
REMINDER: THE "29TH ANNUAL RALLY, MARCH, AND CONCERT TO END HEMP PROHIBITION" WILL TAKE PLACE IN WASHINGTON, D.C. ON JULY 4. JOIN THOUSANDS OF CONCERNED CITIZENS AT THE NATION'S CAPITOL. FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT THE FOURTH OF JULY HEMP COALITION @ (202) 887-5770 OR VISIT ON-LINE AT: HTTP://GEOCITIES/CAPITOLHILL/SENATE/8367/
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