Connecticut Becomes 17th Medical Marijuana State in the Face of Ongoing Federal Intimidation
Advocates applaud new law while citing certain problems like a prohibition on patient cultivationHartford, CT -- Patient advocates applauded
Governor Dannel Malloy today for signing the country's 17th state
medical marijuana law. The Connecticut legislature passed HB 5389 on
May 4th, despite ongoing Justice Department intimidation in medical
marijuana states. The passage of Connecticut's medical marijuana law
comes as the Obama Administration is engaged in an unprecedented
level of attack against patients and their providers.
Paramilitary-style raids on dispensaries and threats of criminal
prosecution and asset forfeiture by U.S. Attorneys are among the
methods used to obstruct implementation of state medical marijuana
laws.
"We are encouraged that state officials are standing up to federal
intimidation and moving ahead with the passage of important public
health laws," said Steph Sherer, Executive Director of Americans for
Safe Access, which worked with local advocates to help pass the
Connecticut law. "We hope other states follow Connecticut's lead in
passing medical marijuana laws so that patients are not left
unprotected and vulnerable to law enforcement actions."
While advocates welcome the protections provided in the bill, there
are a number of problems they've also cited, including a prohibition
on patients cultivating their own medical marijuana. In states such
as New Jersey and Delaware, where the law has relied entirely on
centralized medical marijuana distribution, federal intimidation has
prolonged implementation and prevented patients from being able to
safely and legally obtain their medication.
Another contentious issue for advocates regarding the new
Connecticut law is an overly restrictive list of qualifying medical
conditions. For example, the qualification list excludes chronic
pain, which is the condition for which the vast majority of patients
in the U.S. use medical marijuana. However, there is a provision of
the law that allows for the review and acceptance of additional
medical conditions.
In addition to obstacles erected by the federal government, HB 5389
saw resistance from certain Connecticut lawmakers. For instance,
during deliberations State Senator Toni Boucher (R-Bethel)
introduced dozens of restrictive amendments. Although a handful of
amendments made it to the floor for a vote, including limiting the
law to terminal patients, all of them were rejected.
Connecticut follows the States of Alaska, Arizona, California,
Colorado, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New
Jersey, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington, as well as
Washington, D.C., in passing medical marijuana laws.
Further information:
HB 5389: http://medicalmarijuana.procon.org/sourcefiles/connecticut-hb-5389.pdf