|
For immediate release, Jan. 10, 2010
Sen. Romer Withdraws Restrictive Medical Marijuana
Bill
Contact: Cannabis Therapy Institute
1-877-420-4205
{Denver} -- In a blog on Huffingtonpost.com Saturday, Senator Chris
Romer (D-Denver) announced his attention to drop his bill for an
unworkable licensing regime that would have driven 80% of Colorado
medical marijuana caregivers out of business. Romer claims that
he is giving up on his onerous bill because law enforcement and
the medical marijuana community
were not willing to find common ground.
Read the entire blog:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/chris-romer/colorado-medical-marijuan_b_417488.html
The CTI supporters that have been writing and calling Romer and
telling him to withdraw his bill have won this battle! Romer saw
that he had no political support for his complex monstrosity of
a bill, and wisely decided to drop his misguided attempt at "regulation"
before the legislative
session even started.
Romer writes that his "attempts to bring medical marijuana
out of the shadows through a complex regulatory structure are now
over." However, Romer says he will still have a medical marijuana
bill that will deal with only a few issues. One issue he has identified
is the "need for a meaningful doctor patient relationship"
to get a medical marijuana recommendation. Hopefully, Romer will
not try again to over-step his authority and interfere in the doctor/patient
relationship by requiring a government panel to approve recommendations,
as he did in his original bill.
Romer also says his bill will allow the "creation of a 24-hour
per day registry for patients." CTI is hoping Romer is referring
to CTI's repeated requests for 24/7 access for law enforcement to
the Medical Marijuana Registry. Currently, law enforcement can only
contact the Registry to verify whether a patient is a current member
during regular business hours. If a patient has an encounter with
law enforcement after 5pm and on weekends, law enforcement cannot
contact the Registry to verify a patient's status. This means a
lot of patients are going to jail nnecessarily. This is a huge problem
for patients and has been for several years.
Romer did say, however, that a bill supported by law enforcement
would be introduced in the House that would prohibit a caregiver
from serving more than 5 patients. Romer did not name a sponsor
for this bill.
"This is a guarded victory for Colorado patients," says
Laura Kriho, spokesperson for the Cannabis Therapy Institute, a
patient advocacy group. "Romer's bill was clearly a solution
in search of a problem. We're glad that Romer is now going to focus
on one of the real problems of patients that are still getting arrested
and prosecuted. We would encourage him to do more for patients even
still, and sponsor a Patient Bill of Rights that would help protect
patients from discrimination in areas of housing, employment, probation,
veteran's benefits, insurance and other areas."
"On behalf of patients and caregivers, we're happy that Sen.
Romer has opted to withdraw his 39 pages of crushing regulations
that would have harmed patients," says Rob Corry, Denver attorney
and president of the Colorado Wellness Association, a medical cannabis
industry trade group. "We are guardedly optimistic that the
issues will continue to move in the right direction."
"I'm glad that Senator Romer now sees that excessive government
regulations are not needed," says Timothy Tipton of the Rocky
Mountain Caregivers Cooperative. "Destroying a fledgling industry
before it has even had a chance to take root with excessive government
regulation is a recipe for disaster. We need to have time for the
dispensing business models to develop, and time for the patients
to discover the number and variety of cannabis medicines available
to them. Ultimately, the patients will regulate this market, just
as consumers regulate any market."
###
|