Patient Advocates Back Three Medical Marijuana Bills Introduced Today in Congress
Advocacy group unveils new program to build more skilled, responsive grassroots forceWashington, DC -- Three medical marijuana bills were
introduced today in Congress with support from patient advocates.
The most significant of the three bills is one introduced by
Congressman Frank
(D-MA), which reclassifies marijuana from its current status as a
dangerous drug with no medical value. Another bill, introduced by
Congressman Polis
(D-CO), will allow banks and other financial institutions to provide
services to medical marijuana businesses without being subject to
"suspicious activity" reporting requirements. The third bill,
introduced by Congressman Stark
(D-CA), changes the federal tax code "to allow a deduction for
expenses in connection with the trade or business of selling
marijuana intended for patients for medical purposes pursuant to
State law."
"All of these bills will have a positive effect on hundreds of
thousands of Americans and only a negligible impact to the rest of
the country," said Steph Sherer, Executive Director of Americans for
Safe Access (ASA), the country's largest medical marijuana advocacy
group. "This kind of policy shift is a no-brainer and should garner
the bipartisan support of Congress." To shore up support for these
and other local and state medical marijuana bills, ASA is launching
a new advocacy program.
The introduction of Congressional legislation today comes as ASA is
equipping patient advocates with new tools to lobby local, state and
federal governments. ASA unveiled a new program today that
establishes a "Medical
Cannabis Think Tank" to provide activists the support they
need to analyze pending or proposed legislation and to lobby for the
best laws possible. To support the lobbying effort, ASA also
unveiled its new "Online
Training Center," with more than 4 hours of educational
streaming video and over 400 pages of instruction manuals and
worksheets. ASA's program also includes an improved "Raid
Response Center" to better prepare for aggressive federal
interference.
As part of its "Sick and Tired" campaign, ASA and others filed a
writ Monday in the DC Circuit to compel the federal government
to answer a 9-year-old petition to reclassify cannabis. The
Coalition for Rescheduling Cannabis (CRC) argued in the writ that
the government has unreasonably delayed an answer to the petition in
violation of the Administrative Procedures Act. "The Drug
Enforcement Administration has the opportunity right now to address
the needs of patients across the country by reclassifying cannabis,"
continued Sherer. "However, since Congress can also reclassify
cannabis, we are urging passage of the Frank bill in order to take
advantage of all points of leverage."
If passed, the Frank bill would not only recognize marijuana's
medical value, but also provide a medical necessity defense in
federal court, a right not currently afforded to patients and
caregivers who are in compliance with their local and state laws.
The Frank bill would also usher forth greater research into the
therapeutic properties of cannabis and create incentives for the
development of new cannabis-based medication. Advocates hope the
Polis bill, if passed, will end the current ban on services for
medical marijuana businesses by institutions like Wells Fargo,
CitiCorp and Bank of America. The Stark bill has the potential to
end dozens of audits by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) currently
taking place, and settle once and for all whether the IRS can demand
tax on gross or just net proceeds.
Further information:
Rescheduling bill (Frank): http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/Frank_bill_2011.pdf
Banking bill (Polis): http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/Polis_bill_2011.pdf
IRS bill (Stark): http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/Stark_bill_2011.pdf
ASA Think Tank: http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/section.php?id=384
ASA Online Training Center: http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/article.php?list=type&type=385
ASA Raid Response Center: http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/article.php?list=type&type=168