Translate me

 

Showing posts with label Medical Marijuana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Medical Marijuana. Show all posts

D.C. rules for medical pot program

 

 

 

D.C. rules for medical pot program

District officials released regulations Friday that will govern the city's implementation of its medical marijuana program.

Mayor Adrian M. Fenty's (D) administration has been drafting regulations to license dispensaries, track doctors and users, and identify where to allow the wholesale production of marijuana. The rules would now undergo a public comment and review period, which could take months.

“All District residents deserve access to the full slate of medical treatments available,” Fenty said in a statement Friday. “My Administration will work to ensure that medical marijuana is dispensed safely and efficiently.”
According to the guidelines, qualifying patients must be city residents, must register with District government, and have a qualifying medical condition. The rules also impose fines and the prospect of criminal prosecution for patients who possess marijuana or paraphernalia not authorized by the program.
Caregivers should be at least 18 years of age, must register with the city and would face fines and prosecution if they operate outside the city's guidelines.
Physicians are required to be in good standing to practice in the city, must register with the District and have a legitimate doctor-patient relationship with program participants.
Those seeking permits to operate dispensaries must file a business proposal with the city that includes proposed location, staffing and security plans, and specify cultivation plans when applicable, among other rules.
The council approved the initiative in May, and under home rule, Congress had 30 legislative days to review it. The measure became law after Congress finished its business July 26 because the House and Senate declined to intervene. The law capped a years-long struggle to act on a 1998 referendum in which 69 percent of District residents voted in favor of medical marijuana. Until last year, Congress had blocked the city from enacting the referendum.
Read the rules here.
By Washington Post editors  |  August 6, 2010; 11:51 AM ET
 


Read More... D.C. rules for medical pot program

A request to my internet family!! please take the time and read this

NON Profit Organization for Medical Marijuana in Israel

A request to my internet family,

I am looking for people around the world with experience and talent to help with the various issues connected to the web presence for the NON Profit Organization for Medical Marijuana in Israel. The charity is to help the sick and needy and not for personal gain, be assured it is for a good cause.
We need artists, designers, web geeks an others to help get the new charity's web presence up and running. If you are an artist, free thinker or any of the above we can use your help with graphics, code and other issues associated with the over all internet presence that I may not be aware of or have overlooked. If you want to help, mail my Facebook account with your personal talents and what you think you can do to help the cause.

Where you live and what language you speak or what god you pray to has nothing to do with the cause or issue of medical marijuana for the sick.

This is your chance to make a difference in some ones life, take a stand for what is correct!

All suggestions and all forms of help are welcome,

mazanga
Read More... A request to my internet family!! please take the time and read this

Medical Marijuana Laws Don't Increase Teen Marijuana

Medical Marijuana Laws Don't Increase Teen Marijuana Use

*BUBBLEHASH!!



Medical Marijuana Laws Don't Increase Teen Marijuana Use, Study Shows

SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS — State medical marijuana laws do not increase teen use of marijuana, a new analysis of government data shows. Contrary to claims made by opponents of medical marijuana legislation in Minnesota, the report finds that no state with laws protecting medical marijuana patients has experienced a statistically significant increase in teen marijuana use.
In fact, teen use of marijuana has generally declined in medical marijuana states -- in some cases dramatically. Overall teen marijuana use in these states has decreased at greater rates than the national average.
"I think it's time to put to rest the notion that protecting seriously ill Illinoisans who might benefit from medical marijuana would have any negative impact on efforts to keep marijuana away from our kids," said Ray Warren, director of state policies for the Marijuana Policy Project in Washington, D.C. "As legislators consider this sensible, compassionate measure, they should be aware that we have the benefit of more than 10 years of experience with state medical marijuana laws. And that experience proves that marijuana is good medicine for a number of conditions and patients, and that we can protect their right to good treatment while protecting our kids from drugs."
"Marijuana Use by Young People: The Impact of State Medical Marijuana Laws," prepared by researcher Mitch Earleywine, Ph.D. of the State University of New York and policy experts at the Marijuana Policy Project in Washington, D.C., compiles and analyzes government data regarding rates of adolescent marijuana use. In California, for example, where teen marijuana use was increasing prior to adoption of the state's medical marijuana law in 1996, use dropped dramatically from 1996 to 2006 -- by nearly half in some age groups.
The report, available for download at www.mpp.org/teens, finds that marijuana use among teens has decreased across the country. Overall, states with medical marijuana laws had slightly more favorable trends than the national rates. Alaska, Hawaii, Maine, and Nevada all had slightly greater decreases in teen marijuana use than the national average, and California and Washington experienced significantly greater decreases.
New Mexico recently became the 12th state to establish medical marijuana laws, joining Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington.
With more than 21,000 members and 100,000 e-mail subscribers nationwide, the Marijuana Policy Project is the largest marijuana policy reform organization in the United States. MPP believes that the best way to minimize the harm associated with marijuana is to regulate marijuana in a manner similar to alcohol.
For more information, please visit www.MarijuanaPolicy.org.

BTW!

* For the record, I do not have, have not ever had, and don’t plan to have, marijuana growing, or used, in or near my home or any other location familiar to me that I may or may not have access to. Any posting I make on any forums like this one are for purely entertainment purposes and anything other then this paragraph should not be considered truthful or reality based. Any pictures that I post have been created by artificial means from images gathered from, but not limited to, the World Wide Web...
Read More... Medical Marijuana Laws Don't Increase Teen Marijuana

ShareThis