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PA HB 1393 medical marijuana legal in Pennsylvania by spring of 2010

 
**REALITYMATRIX**
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12/02/2009 07:58 PM
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PA HB 1393 medical marijuana legal in Pennsylvania by spring of 2010
Patrick Nightingale, a Pittsburgh criminal defense attorney and Executive Director of Pittsburgh NORML and Charles Rocha are on their way back to the burg after an important day spent testifying in Harrisburg before the Pennsylvania Health and Human Services Committee.

Nightingale testified about the serious criminal sanctions facing marijuana users who naively believe that it is better to grow marijuana for their own consumption than to enter into drug transactions with drug dealers.

Prior to this afternoon’s hearing, Pennsylvanians were unsure how the bill would be received. “There are definitely going to be more hearings,” said Patrick.”

That would have been almost too much to hope for a couple months ago. PA HB 1393 was introduced by Senator Mark Cohen of Philadelphia in April and referred to the Pennsylvania Committee of Health and Human Services in April. The hearings were expected in September but due to the budget crisis were postponed for what seemed like forever.

"It was a great hearing," said Rep. Mark Cohen who sponsored the bill. We moved the bill forward dramatically. There was a lot of thoughtful testimony."

Tim Seip, Secretary of Health and Human Services said, "There was a lot of passion and emotion in the room. Many of the committee members have strong feelings. Seip, who supports the bill, hopes the next round of hearings will take place in January or February the vote this spring.

Governor Rendell has stated that he will sign a "well-crafted" bill.



[link to www.examiner.com]
Anonymous Coward
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12/02/2009 08:00 PM
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Re: PA HB 1393 medical marijuana legal in Pennsylvania by spring of 2010
Hang on a little longer and we might...might...grant you Permission to partake of a flowering herb...I mean DRUG!
**REALITYMATRIX**  (OP)

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12/02/2009 08:05 PM
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Re: PA HB 1393 medical marijuana legal in Pennsylvania by spring of 2010
AP)

The growing debate surrounding the legalization of marijuana as a medicine has arrived in Pennsylvania _ although it may not go far.

The House Committee on Health and Human Services heard testimony Wednesday from patients, doctors and members of advocacy groups who say medical marijuana should be legal because it is effective in treating chronic pain, nausea and other ailments.

However, the bill, sponsored by Rep. Mark Cohen, D-Philadelphia, faces long odds, because it is opposed by Attorney General Tom Corbett and the Senate's Republican majority is not likely to take up the issue.

Committee Chairman Frank Oliver, D-Philadelphia, plans more hearings on the bill before a vote is taken, an aide said. The three hours of testimony at the Capitol was at times emotional, including a woman whose daughter died of a drug overdose and a young man whose mother smoked marijuana to ease the pain of terminal breast cancer.

One speaker, Brad Walter, said he smokes marijuana four or five times a day to relieve gastrointestinal pain and distress from the 14 pills he takes to counteract the effects of HIV.

Walter, of Larksville, said he takes the risk of getting pot illegally because nothing else _ including Marinol, a government-approved prescription drug that contains the active ingredient in marijuana _ helps nearly as much.

Marinol, he said, helps his appetite, but not the pain. Smoking marijuana helps both, he said.

"I would not smoke it if it were not for this," Walter, 31, said in an interview.

Sharon Smith, a suburban Harrisburg resident who started the drug-treatment advocacy group Momstell after her daughter Angela died of a heroin overdose in 1998, questioned who would end up using the drug, given the instances of abuse in other states that have legalized medical marijuana.

In addition, she said, legislators are ill-equipped to decide whether any substance should be considered medicine.

"Let the medical experts make this decision, not the legislators," she told the committee.

In a letter to the committee, Corbett said he opposes the bill, warning that even the limited legalization of marijuana could compound the dangers that drugs present to society.

A spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Dominic Pileggi, R-Delaware, said the chamber's GOP members have no plans to consider such a bill, even if it were to pass the Democratic-controlled House.

Under Cohen's bill, the state Department of Health would issue ID cards to patients who have been diagnosed by a physician with a debilitating medical condition, such as cancer or HIV, and whose physician recommended the use of marijuana. Patients under 18 could use marijuana, as well, with the consent of a parent or custodian.

The department would establish or license dispensaries to grow and distribute marijuana.

For now, medical marijuana occupies a gray area of the law.

Federal law makes marijuana use and sales illegal _ even for medical reasons _ and the Federal Drug Administration has not approved marijuana for medicinal use.

However, 13 states allow the medical use of marijuana without penalty _ a doctor's recommendation is always required, according to marijuana advocates _ and federal agents are discouraged from arresting medical marijuana users and suppliers as long as they conform to state laws.

Maryland law levies a maximum penalty of $100 for a defendant in a marijuana-related state prosecution who successfully claims that their use is a medical necessity, advocates say.

Other state legislatures, including New Jersey's, are considering medical marijuana bills.
PA Resident
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01/22/2010 06:41 PM
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Re: PA HB 1393 medical marijuana legal in Pennsylvania by spring of 2010
Pennsylvania needs to follow in the footsteps of New Jersey and pass this bill: HB 1393
PA Resident
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01/22/2010 06:50 PM
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Re: PA HB 1393 medical marijuana legal in Pennsylvania by spring of 2010
[link to www.whtm.com]
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01/22/2010 06:55 PM
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Re: PA HB 1393 medical marijuana legal in Pennsylvania by spring of 2010
Support Medical Marijuana in Pennsylvania: [link to www.pa4mmj.org]
Anonymous Coward
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04/08/2010 11:06 AM
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Re: PA HB 1393 medical marijuana legal in Pennsylvania by spring of 2010
Pennsylvania needs to follow in the footsteps of New Jersey and pass this bill: HB 1393
 Quoting: PA Resident 871635

bsflag bsflag
cracksmoker420
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04/08/2010 11:07 AM
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Re: PA HB 1393 medical marijuana legal in Pennsylvania by spring of 2010
Support Medical Marijuana in Pennsylvania: [link to www.pa4mmj.org]
 Quoting: PA Resident 871635

smooke BLUNTS!!!!!!! peace
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04/08/2010 11:07 AM
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Re: PA HB 1393 medical marijuana legal in Pennsylvania by spring of 2010
When I saw this on the thread it had 420 views. hehehe
Towlie
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07/08/2010 08:03 AM
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Re: PA HB 1393 medical marijuana legal in Pennsylvania by spring of 2010
The only problem we have in PA is Tom Corbet, who will be voted out next time around. Hate to tell you right wingers but this is a democratic state.


Ironic that Republicans want to lower taxes so they can have more wealth and its socialism if the government raises taxes. The same people want to restrict my pursuit of happiness, an unalienable right given to us in the declaration of independence. I see my self as a a Christian, but I do not think that Jesus would like the top 1 % hording 90% of the wealth and invoking his name in the process.

You want to talk about fantasy then look no further than the bible. I took one Science class in a Christian School and right their own curriculum to fit the bible a book written by corrupt catholic priests and then translated from Latin to English by King James, not the NBA star. Corrupt men wrote the bible, God and Jesus may have influenced it but man took it for their own personal gain.

Is impossible to overdose on weed, instead of spending money on stupid commercials that encourage kids to smoke. Worry about Crack/Heroin/Meth the real problems instead of ignoring them like Reagen did in the early 80's.

Bradley

bradshroyer(AT)bigstring.com peace





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