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Southern California NORML Anniversary Party with Bambu Station

Please join us for this event presented by WorldBeat Center and Southern California NORML.

Bambu Station was founded in 1996 by Jalani Horton of St. Thomas, V.I. to present creative ideas that would impact peoples lives. In 1999, Andy Llanos of St. Croix joined Bambú Station as the bassist and Tuff Lion, with his brilliant guitar work offered his wealth of experience to help the young bredrens evolve and grow.

Their initial recording was the independently released single, “Amadou Diallo” (2000) and commenced a musical relationship with the addition of Warren Pedersen in 2003 that has galvanized roots fans across the world. Several of their releases are some of the most regarded works today. The sound of Bambú Station is best described as heavy, natural and relentlessly captivating. From its’ music to its’ lyrics, Bambú Station’s sound is very percussive, profound and inviting to any listener.

Their recordings and live shows are filled with a brilliant spirit, harmonies and an alluring quality. They are certainly one of the most significant artists representing reggae music in this generation.

VENDOR SPACE AVAILABLE: Contact [email protected].

Vote for a New Member of MPP's Board of Directors

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Dear friends:

MPP is in the process of choosing a new member of our board of directors.

Want to take part and vote for a candidate?

Qualifying to vote is easy: Anyone who has donated to MPP or the MPP Medical Marijuana Political Action Committee in the last 365 days is eligible to vote. (Donations to MPP Foundation do not count for the purpose of determining eligibility for the MPP board vote.)

If you don't currently qualify to vote, but if you'd like to participate, simply make yourself eligible by making a donation to MPP right now, and then you can cast your vote.

I invite you to participate in the governance of MPP by voting today. Together we will end marijuana prohibition.

Sincerely,

Rob Signature 123109

Rob Kampia
Executive Director
Marijuana Policy Project
Washington, D.C.

 

To contact MPP, please click here or reply to this e-mail. Our mailing address is Marijuana Policy Project, 236 Massachusetts Ave. NE, Suite 400, Washington, D.C. 20002. Any donations you make to MPP may be used for political purposes, such as supporting or opposing candidates for federal office.


 

COPs on the Hill: Stories from the week of July 30, 2010

COPs on the Hill

Stories from the week of July 30, 2010

The wine is sweeter today:  This week the House passed by voice vote (no one heard a nay) the Webb Criminal Justice Commission bill. The commission will study drug prohibition and make recommendations to the Congress on whether to keep all of it, some of it, none of it, etc. The Senate is expected (but don’t hold your breath) to pass it in September. Medium sized step..

As a bonus the House passed and it now goes for Obama’s signature a bill to reduce the disparity between crack and powder cocaine from 100:1 to 18:1. This an 82% improvement not based in science (in which case it would be 1:1).  Still this will allow thousands to dealers to go free and act as a model for the states to adopt the federal standard. Some states have already gone 1:1.

As my LEAP colleague Tom Angell pointed out, it was very significant that the Republicans did not demand a roll call vote on either bill. “Soft on drugs/soft on crime” has been used by the Rs for decades to hurt the Dems. On this day, they allowed good legislation to go forward without a recorded vote.

Karen and I start a week long vacation today, so no letter next week.

www.mapinc.org considered this the best published LTE a  few weeks ago.  It was in my hometown paper.

 LETTER OF THE WEEK

LOST WAR ON DRUGS AND ITS CASUALTIES

When you lie down with dogs, often you will get up with fleas. Yet another in my profession (Megan Mattingly) has been tainted by the enforcement of drug prohibition. Add her to the many, many thousands who have been corrupted or killed, or who have committed suicide after being corrupted. And for what? We in law enforcement know that every drug dealer arrested is replaced within days. The nine suspects released (or even if they had gone to prison) are meaningless.

A trillion tax dollars spent and 40 years of serious effort have resulted in a Maryland free of drugs? No. Quite the contrary. Drugs are cheaper, stronger and readily available to our teens.

Please tell this reader again why you support this Bridge to Nowhere policy.

Howard Wooldridge

retired detective/officer

Buckeystown

Source: Frederick News Post (MD)

Pubdate: Mon, 21 Jun 2010

Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n000/a017.html

 COP stats since August 2009:

 443  presentations to Congressional Staffers 

7 presentations to VIPs (elected officials)

37 published Letters to the Editor 

Numerous conferences, hearings & briefings attended.  C-Span broadcast my question at a Senate briefing. 

12  radio shows 

8  TV interviews (Colombian TV, Fox and Univision, NBC, cable)

Consider being a member of COPs at $30.00 or more per year.  Add your voice to those who agree that Modern Prohibition/War on Drugs is the most destructive, dysfunctional and immoral policy since slavery & Jim Crow. Go to: www.CitizensOpposingProhibition.org and click on Donate/Join – by credit card or check.

Tell Your Congressperson to Oppose S.258

 

Dear friends,

The US Senate passed S.258, the "Saving Kids from Dangerous Drugs Act of 2010."  We are concerned that without amendments, this act goes too far and infringes on the rights of medical marijuana patients by doubling federal penalties. Now is the time to act -- Tell your Representative that medical marijuana patients deserve protection!

Many patients, particularly the elderly and those with compromised lung function, prefer to use medical cannabis in edible forms as opposed to smoking or inhaling their medicine. S. 258 unfairly puts these patients and their providers at a heightened risk of arrest and prosecution.

The House has an opportunity to make important changes to the legislation before they vote on the bill.  Patients and advocates are leading the call for sensible and responsible amendments to the legislation, and they need your help. Take Action Now Phone and email your Representative today! Please forward this action request to your friends, family and networks across the Country.

Sincerely

Steph Sherer     
Executive Director          

ASA needs your support!

Americans for Safe Access

Please support ASA!

On The Web:

ASA's Mission

ASA Forums

ASA Blog

Take Action

ASA's Online Store

"Gear up" for medical cannabis activism with ASA's new T-shirts, hats, stickers, bags and more! All proceeds go to ASA advocacy

 

D.C. Unveils Draft Medical Marijuana Regulations (Press Release)

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                                                                                 

AUGUST 6, 2010

D.C. Unveils Draft Medical Marijuana Regulations

Mayor’s Order Stalls Implementation Until January 2011, Advocates Say Delays Come at Cost to Patients

CONTACT: Dan Riffle: 202-905-2026 or [email protected]; Mike Meno: 202-905-2030 or 443-927-6400

WASHINGTON, D.C. — According to a series of proposed regulations released today by Mayor Adrian Fenty and the City Administrator, various agencies tasked with overseeing the District’s recently approved medical marijuana law will not have the authority to begin licensing providers or accepting patient applications until January 1, 2011. That means patients suffering from conditions such as cancer and HIV/AIDS will be unnecessarily forced to wait even longer for relief. The District still needs to consider and license potential applicants to manage medical marijuana dispensaries before patients can legally obtain medical marijuana to alleviate their symptoms. Under the District’s law, qualified patients will only be allowed to legally use marijuana that comes from a licensed dispensary. 

         “It was 1998 when District residents overwhelmingly approved Initiative 59, and the District Council has been considering this legislation since February, so there’s no reason for the mayor’s office to be dragging its feet,” said Dan Riffle, a legislative analyst with the Marijuana Policy Project. “Patients in the District who could benefit from medical marijuana have already had to wait 12 years for this law. Why should they be needlessly forced to wait another five months?”   

         Nearly 70 percent of District voters passed a referendum on medical marijuana in 1998, but Congress blocked its implementation until this past year. The D.C. Council approved an amended initiative in May, and last month Congress declined to take action to block the bill. 

         “The proposed regulations released today are detailed and comprehensive, but there are several issues that we hope are addressed before they are finalized,” Riffle said. “For example, the draft regulations call for applications from prospective dispensary or cultivation center owners to be accepted on a first-come, first-serve basis, which could lead to the first applicants being awarded licenses, rather than the best applicants. Also, the lack of a competitive, scored application process—such as those utilized in Maine and other medical marijuana jurisdictions—raises questions of transparency and fairness. However, patients will benefit from the regulatory prohibition on the use of pesticides or contaminants, and the detailed packaging and labeling requirements for medical marijuana products.”

         With more than 124,000 members and supporters nationwide, the Marijuana Policy Project is the largest marijuana policy reform organization in the United States. For more information, please visit www.mpp.org.

####

ASA Activist Newsletter - August 2010

 

In This Issue:

New Jersey Officials Dither on Medical Cannabis Law

VA Relaxes Restrictions on Medical Cannabis

More Federal Meddling with Medical Cannabis

Decision Delayed on California Dispensary Bans

ACTION ALERT: Meet with your Members of Congress!

 

Become an ASA Member!

Please support the work of Americans for Safe Access

On The Web:

ASA's Mission

What We Do

ASA Forums

ASA Blog

ASA YouTube

Legal Info

Take Action

Condition-Based Booklets

Join ASA Email Lists

ASA's Online Store

"Gear up" for medical cannabis activism with ASA's new T-shirts, hats, stickers, bags and more! All proceeds go to ASA advocacy

Americans for Safe Access

1322 Webster St., Ste. 402
Oakland, CA 94612
Phone: 510-251-1856
Fax: 510-251-2036

Email us!

 

Americans for Safe Access
Monthly Activist Newsletter

August 2010

Volume 5, Issue 8


New Jersey Officials Dither on Medical Cannabis Law

ASA Director to Hold Stakeholders' Meeting this Month

Garden State citizens who use cannabis on the advice of their doctors were to have begun enjoying some legal protection this month, but Governor Chris Christie asked for a 90-day delay to come up with a new distribution scheme and has postponed enacting the law until next year. ASA Executive Director Steph Sherer will be facilitating a stakeholders' meeting in New Jersey later this month to help advocates and policymakers move forward.

The governor's idea was to have Rutgers University grow the state's medicinal cannabis, and teaching hospitals distribute it, but that was nixed by university officials over concerns they would lose federal grant monies. Since hospitals are in similar jeopardy over Medicare and Medicaid funds, hospital officials say they don't expect that part of the governor's plan to pan out, either.

As passed by the legislature last year and signed by outgoing Governor Jon Corzine, New Jersey's medical cannabis law stipulates six not-for-profit "alternative treatment centers" would grow and distribute it. One of the state senators who sponsored the bill, Nicholas P. Scutari, told the New York Times that Gov. Christie wants too much control over the program, leaving the state no choice but to approve private growers.

Americans for Safe Access is working with the Coalition for Medical Marijuana New Jersey (CMMNJ) to facilitate effective implementation of the state's new law. Steph Sherer will be in Trenton on Saturday, August 21 for a stakeholders' meeting at the New Jersey State Museum Auditorium from 10:00 am until 4:00 pm.

Like other stakeholder meetings ASA has been facilitating across the country, this event is aimed at creating meaningful national progress through building a strong grassroots that can advocate for change. CMMNJ's Executive Director Ken Wolski, RN, and the group's media spokesperson, Chris Goldstein, will be joining Sherer for discussion of how to not just pass federal, state, and local legislation that creates safe and legal access but also implement those laws so they meet the needs of patients.

The cost to attend the all-day conference is $20. A benefit dinner with Steph Sherer and CMMNJ volunteers and board members will be held the previous evening, Friday, August 20, at 7:00 PM. Tickets for the benefit dinner are $100. Go to www.cmmnj.org for more information and reservations.

Back to Top


VA Relaxes Restrictions on Medical Cannabis

Policy at Odds with Government's Classification of Cannabis

In a decision with far-reaching implications, the federal Veterans Health Administration (VA) last month reversed a long-standing policy that barred veterans who receive VHA care from using medical cannabis. The new policy states that "patients participating in state medical marijuana programs must not be denied VHA services."

The VHA directive is another formal acknowledgment that the federal government's contention that "marijuana has no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States" is in error. As a result, Americans for Safe Access has filed a new brief with the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in support of its lawsuit arguing that the government is required by law to correct its misstatements about the medical utility of cannabis.

"They've denied the science for years," said ASA Chief Counsel Joe Elford, who filed the notice with the court. "But it's all the more difficult for the federal government to say cannabis has no medical value when one of its agencies has accepted it as a legal medicine."

Prior to the directive being issued, the new policy was laid out in a letter to Michael Krawitz of Veterans for Medical Marijuana Access. In the letter, Department of Veterans Affairs Under Secretary for Health Dr. Robert Petzel writes that agreements between doctors and patients about how to treat pain "should draw a clear distinction between the use of illegal drugs, and legal medical marijuana."

Over the past several years, ASA has received numerous reports of veterans being denied pain medication by VHA physicians for refusing to discontinue their medical use of cannabis, even though it had been approved by other doctors. Dr. Petzel's letter states that under the new policy, "if a veteran obtains and uses medical marijuana in a manner consistent with state law, testing positive for marijuana would not preclude the Veteran from receiving opioids for pain management." VHA physicians are still prohibited from directly authorizing cannabis use.

Numerous clinical and pre-clinical studies have demonstrated that cannabis is not only an effective analgesic in its own right but also creates an "entourage effect" that increases the effectiveness of opiod pain killers, allowing patients to reduce the dosage of drugs with potentially dangerous side effects. Other reports indicate that cannabis can be an effective treatment for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). According to Krawitz's group, more than 100,000 veterans, or 27% of veterans treated by the VHA, have been diagnosed with PTSD.

The brief ASA just filed as the result of this policy change is in support of ASA's lawsuit to compel the federal government to correct its misstatements about medical cannabis. The suit, which is currently on appeal, stems from an administrative petition ASA filed in 2005 under the Data Quality Act, a federal law that says information disseminated by government agencies must be based on sound science.

More Information:
Veterans Health Administration policy directive issued July 22
Letter from the VA to Michael Krawitz
ASA's legal brief on the directive
Data Quality Act appeal filed by ASA

Back to Top


More Federal Meddling with Medical Cannabis

New Raids in California, Patient-Provider Denied Defense

It's been nine months since the Department of Justice handed down a new policy on medical cannabis, but some federal officials apparently haven't gotten the memo. In the past two months alone, federal agents raided three medical cannabis dispensing collectives in San Diego, a federal defendant was denied the opportunity to tell the jury in his case that he was operating a medical dispensary in compliance with state law, and the first person to be certified by the Mendocino sheriff to grow cannabis for patients had her farm raided and plants and computers seized by the DEA.

Following President Obama's campaign promises to end federal interference with state medical cannabis programs and official statements from the White House and Attorney General Holder that those promises would be kept, the attorney general's office sent a memo to U.S. Attorneys in October 2009 telling them it would be an "inefficient" use of federal resources to prosecute individuals who are in "clear and unambiguous" compliance with state law.

"This pattern of continuing interference with state medical cannabis programs suggests the Obama Administration can't control the DEA or federal prosecutors," said Caren Woodson, ASA's Director of Government Affairs. "How could anyone's compliance with state law be any clearer or more unambiguous than having certification from the sheriff? And then preventing them from presenting evidence about their medical conditions or state law only guarantees their conviction."

Joy Greenfield was the first person in Mendocino County to register with the sheriff's office to cultivate cannabis for patients. Shortly after she received certification last month, which included individual zip-ties to identify the registered plants, DEA agents raided her property, confiscating all her plants and the sheriff's zip-ties.

James Stacy, a San Diego-area medical cannabis provider raided by the DEA in September 2009, goes to trial in federal court on August 30. The judge in his case ruled last month that Obama Administration's new policy on medical cannabis would not change what he was permitted to introduce as evidence. Legislation is currently pending in Congress that would change those rules of evidence.

"Despite a new Justice Department policy on medical marijuana enforcement, James Stacy was still denied a defense in federal court," said Congressman Sam Farr (D-CA), author of HR3939, the Truth in Trials Act, legislation that would allow defendants such as Stacy to use evidence of state law compliance in federal court. "The Truth in Trials Act would correct this aberration of justice and ensure that no one else will needlessly face years in prison without the means to defend themselves."

Further Information:
Ruling by federal judge denying Stacy's defense
October 2009 Justice Department policy directive on medical cannabis

Back to Top


Decision Delayed on Calif. Dispensary Bans

A California appeals court has again postponed judgment on the critical question of whether California state law prevents local governments from banning the operation of storefront dispensing collectives. The appeals court has twice used procedural maneuvers to escape time limits on filing its decision in Qualified Patients Association v. City of Anaheim, the first to solicit more briefs and now to "circulate its opinion."

"It's hard to read the tea leaves, but we're encouraged that the court is referring to a single opinion rather than more than one," said ASA Chief Counsel Joe Elford, who argued the case before the Fourth Court of Appeals. "We expect a unanimous decision in favor of patient rights.

Elford told the court that California's Medical Marijuana Program Act (SB420) specifically bars local governments from using nuisance statutes to ban medical cannabis dispensaries. That argument was bolstered by a concurring brief from Senator Mark Leno, one of the principal co-authors of the bill.

A decision is now expected within the next 30 days.

Back to Top


ACTION ALERT: Meet with your Members of Congress!

Call today to schedule a meeting or locate a town hall forum

In August your U.S. Senators and Representatives will be home to meet with constituents like you. The summer recess provides an opportunity to advocate for medical cannabis patients and their caregivers by communicating directly with your Members of Congress.

Tell your personal story, share research information, or explain how federal law affects you and your family. Ask your Representatives to explain what they are doing to help bridge the divide between state and federal medical cannabis laws. Here are some other ideas:

~ Cosponsor the "Truth in Trials Act" (H.R. 3939)
~ Oppose the "Saving Kids from Dangerous Drugs Act" (S.258)
~ Discuss concerns about the nomination of Michele Leonhart to head the DEA

For information about how to request a meeting with your Members of Congress, visit www.AmericansForSafeAccess.org/MeetCongress .


Click here to download a pdf of this newsletter to copy and distribute
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Medical Marijuana Advocates Try Again With Limited Bill

The Texas Coalition for Compassionate Care, Texas NORML, and Medcan University are lobbying legislators in hopes of reforming Texas’ marijuana laws. The organizations don't agree on strategy, however, with the TCCC pushing only for a limited law allowing medical use as a defense against criminal charges, and the others seeking broader legalization that would include permitting and regulating sales outlets.
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Welcome to Our New Web Site

StoptheDrugWar.org has completed the first stage of a major upgrade and expansion of our web site. This article explains some of what we've done so far, and also where some sections of the site that you've been used to from before can still be found.

Marijuana Initiative: "Just Say Now"

Backers of a new initiative to end the federal prohibition on marijuana made the case that a "silenced majority" of Americans are "beginning to rise up" to express their support for ending what they say has been a failed war on marijuana. The organizations -- Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, Students for Sensible Drug Policy, and FireDogLake -- are circulating a petition online and on college campuses asking President Obama to end the federal ban on using the drug.

The 39th Annual National NORML Conference: Just Say Now!

The 2010 NORML Conference will be held in beautiful Portland, Oregon...please join us!

Panel Topics:

  • Just Say Now! The Case For Taxing And Controlling Cannabis
  • NORML's 2009-2010 Legislative and Political Round-Up
  • NORML Women's Alliance Presents: Stiletto Stoners? Not! Women, Cannabis And Respect
  • Ask The Experts: Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About Cannabis But Were Afraid To Ask
  • Lessons From The 'Dry Decade': What Cannabis Law Reformers Can Learn From Alcohol's Reformers
  • High Times' Cannabis Cultivation: Ready, Set and Grow!
  • Cannabis Activism, Social Networking and Community Building To Affect Legal Reforms
  • Industrial Hemp: Why? How? When?
  • Cannabis As An 'Exit', Not An 'Entry' Drug
  • Cannabis and Mental Health: A Medical and Research Discussion About Schizophrenia, PTSD, Bi-Polarity and Abuse
  • Cannabis Legalization and Medicalization: Working Together!
  • Medical Cannabis and Employment Law: Legal Discrimination?
  • Medical Marijuana: The New Jim Crow?
  • NORML Legal Committee: Overview of State Medical Cannabis Laws
  • Reefer Movie Madness: A History of Cannabis in the Movies

Medical Cannabis-only day

  • Saturday, September 11
  • Join America's top doctors, researchers, and lawyers as they discuss the latest developments in medical marijuana science, policy and the law.

For more information and to register, see: http://norml.org/index.cfm?Group_ID=8125.

For general questions, please contact 1-888-67-NORML or [email protected].