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disorderlyvision
01-21-2010, 10:33 PM
The Missouri Affiliate of The National Organization for the Reform of
Marijuana Laws

For Immediate Release:
Wednesday, January 20, 2010

For More Information Contact:
Dan Viets, Missouri NORML Coordinator, 573-819-2669
<danviets@justice.com>

MEDICAL MARIJUANA BILL FILED WITH BI-PARTISAN SPONSORSHIP

A bill to permit Missouri citizens whose doctors believe they benefit from
the use of marijuana as medicine to do so without fear of criminal
prosecution and imprisonment has been filed by Representative Kate Meiners
of Kansas City. The bill has more sponsors than ever before, with 16
House members signing onto the bill, including Republican Representative
Robert Schaaf, a physician from St. Joseph.

Fourteen states and the District of Columbia now have laws which permit
patients to use marijuana as medicine with the approval of their doctors.
Just this week, New Jersey’s legislature passed such a bill and the
Governor has announced his intention to sign it. A few weeks ago,
Congress voted to allow the D.C. Medical Marijuana Initiative to take
effect there.

In past years, when the bill had only Democratic sponsorship, House
Speaker Ron Richard failed to assign the bill to a committee. With the
bipartisan sponsorship the bill now has, it is hoped that the Speaker will
assign the bill to a committee promptly and allow it an opportunity to be
heard.

Similar legislation is pending in many other state legislatures across the
country. The Illinois Senate passed a medical marijuana bill last year
and it is now pending before the House in that state.

A few months ago, the American Medical Association (AMA) reversed its
longstanding opposition to the use of marijuana as medicine. The AMA now
supports allowing marijuana to be prescribed and acknowledges that it has
proven medical use. Medical marijuana legislation is also supported by
the American College of Physicians, American Nurses Association and dozens
of other major professional and health-related
organizations.

House Bill 1670 would place the issue before Missouri voters in November
of 2011. In 1994, the Missouri Senate passed SCR 14 which called on
Congress to make marijuana available for medical use. Under current
Missouri law, doctors are allowed to prescribe cocaine, opium,
methamphetamine and hundreds of other potentially dangerous addictive
drugs. Supporters of the bill say it is absurd to not trust those same
doctors with the ability to authorize their patients to also use a
relatively safe and non-addictive substance like cannabis. Polls have
strong majority support for the measure among Missouri voters.

Mach
01-26-2010, 12:23 AM
I did not know that....good stuff... thanks.