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| Safe Access Now Join Date: Jul 2006 Location: Santa Rosa Co-Op: NO Vendor: NO Patient: YES
Posts: 45
Rep Power: 14 | Write Letters to the Editor for the Modesto Bee! Dear Stanislaus County medical marijuana supporter- On Thursday, the Modesto Bee ran an article on Tuolumne County's approval of the medical marijuana ID card program (see below). Within the next 60 days, Merced and Tuolumne Counties will have the card program in place. Now it's time for Stanislaus County patients and advocates to send letters to the editor, urging the county to approve the program. Our medical marijuana laws need to be applied uniformly, throughout the state. The Stanislaus County Public Health Department has already developed the program, however in October 2006, the board voted to delay implementation until after the lawsuit in San Diego is resolved. Since then, the San Diego County Superior Court ruled that the ID card program did not violate federal law and the requirement that counties offer the card stands. San Diego County is appealing the ruling in a futile attempt to continue their attack on patients. With significant public pressure, Stanislaus County could finally move to implement the program. Please send your letter to the editor to letters@modbee.com or by clicking here. Letters must be 200 word or less and should reference the recent article about Tuolumne County. Please feel free to use any of the talking points posted at the bottom of this message to help you with your letter. Thank you for taking action to protect central valley patients. Aaron Smith Safe Access Now Modesto Bee, March 15 2007 Medical marijuana cards OK'd By JOHN HOLLAND BEE STAFF WRITER SONORA — Medical marijuana users in Tuolumne County soon can get identification cards under a plan narrowly approved Tuesday by the Board of Supervisors. The board voted 3-2 to carry out a 2003 state law requiring counties to offer the cards. They will be available to people whose physicians recommend marijuana under Proposition 215, passed by California voters in 1996. Patients could show the cards to police officers to prove they are entitled to possess small amounts of marijuana. "What this does is ensure that patients will not be arrested," said Aaron Smith, state coordinator for Safe Access Now, a Santa Rosa-based group that supports medical marijuana. Supervisors Liz Bass, Paolo Maffei and Teri Murrison voted in favor of issuing the cards. Dick Pland and Mark Thornton dissented. With Tuesday's vote, 31 of the state's 58 counties have adopted plans for issuing the cards, Smith said. Merced County did so in December, soon after it and two Southern California counties lost a court challenge to the 2003 law. Stanislaus and San Joaquin counties have not acted. Supporters of medical marijuana say it can help relieve the pain of cancer, AIDS and several other ailments. But some officials have been leery of issuing the cards because federal law bars all uses of the drug. Thornton said Tuesday that he opposes the cards, in part because they could be an invasion of patients' privacy and, in part, because he is not convinced of marijuana's medical value. If it does contain beneficial sub-stances, he said, they can be extracted rather than smoked. The Tuolumne County Public Health Department plans to start issuing the cards May 1, said Dr. Todd Stolp, county health officer. The cards will be good for one year at a time. The $126 fee will be halved for low-income patients who are on Medi-Cal or in the County Medical Service Program. The card system could ease growing marijuana mainly for personal use, as many California cities have moved to block dispensaries that sell the drug. For more information on Tuolumne County's ID card plan, call 533-7400. TALKING POINTS SUPPORTING THE MED. MARIJUANA ID PROGRAM*: Feel free to use some of the following "talking points" in your letter*: - Now that neighboring Merced and Tuolumne Counties are both implementing the statewide medical marijuana ID card program, it's time for Stanislaus County to follow suit. It makes no sense that patients in neighboring counties will be afforded more rights, under state law, than patients living in here in Stanislaus. - The ID card protects patients and caregivers from being falsely arrested and frees up valuable public safety resources - The ID card program will greatly assist law enforcement in distinguishing patients with legitimate medical marijuana recommendations from those who are using false or counterfeit documentation. - Counties have a legal responsibility to implement the program, as a requirement of Senate Bill 420, passed into law in 2003 and upheld by a San Diego Superior Court ruling in December 2006. - Voter support for safe and legal access to medical marijuana has only grown stronger since the passage of the Compassionate Use Act in 1996. Today, 3-out-of-4 Californians support implementation of our medical marijuana laws. *It is also a good idea to open your letter with a brief narrative describing the reasons you use medical cannabis, if you are comfortable doing so. -- F. Aaron Smith Safe Access Now phone: (707) 575-9870 fax: (866) 204-1341 e-mail: safeaccessnow@gmail.com |
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