Oregon Alert!!!!

mogie

Well-Known Member
Still Time to Take ACTION!

Prohibitionists have filed an initiative that would repeal the OMMA here in Oregon and replace it with an synthetic-marijuana system. This is a threat to OMMA. If it passes all patients would be forced at gunpoint to switch to marinol or other pharmaceutical synthetics allowed by Prohibitionists irregardless if they work or even kill the patient.

They have filed this initiative for the November 2008 ballot. It has a preliminary ballot title that fails to mention the repeal of the OMMA. With an I-104 Comment Deadline of End-of-Day on July 9, every OMMA supporter should call or fax comments to the Secretary of State's office challenging the Ballot Measure title and description first thing Monday.

The Secretary of State Elections Division won't take e-mail comments but said fax is OK: (Salem) 503-373-7414 is their fax number. (Salem) 503-986-1518 is voice and a human will answer.

You can find Letter examples, with lots a great talking points, at -
http://www.mercycenters.org/action/alert.html#examples

- PLEASE Take time and send a comment or, if you've already communicated, encourage someone to send one also. This is something of a a numbers game so we need to touch EveryOne we know on this and get them to call. Thanx!
 

mogie

Well-Known Member
Oregon's Medical Marijuana Law Under Attack!
Please help protect Oregon’s patients.
Right-wing Republican Kevin Mannix has filed an initiative that would abolish Oregon's Medical Marijuana Program, instantly making criminals of over 16,000 sick Oregon patients. Mannix, an insurance defense attorney and former chairperson of Oregon's Republican Party, even plans a tax-payer-funded-gift to the pharmaceutical industry by requiring the state of Oregon to purchase less-effective prescription drugs, like Marinol, for Oregon's medical marijuana patients, who he intends to treat like criminals.
This terrible initiative has national implications because if the right-wing Republicans, insurance companies, and Big Pharma manage to dismantle the Oregon Medical Marijuana Program, they will be emboldened to kill the programs of all of the other medical marijuana states. This is an important time for our movement and all of us, especially sick patients, need us to move forward, not back to a time where grandmothers stricken with glaucoma and cancer are treated as drug dealers. Kevin Mannix's Act can be read at:
WHAT IT IS GOING TO DO; and other Text of Interest:
Sec 1 This Act shall be known as the Oregon Crimefighting Act. The purpose of this Act is to reduce all types of crime in Oregon, thereby better protecting our people and stimulating economic growth through improved and aggressive prevention, early intervention, investigation, prosecution, accountability, and rehabilitation. Drug abuse and addiction are heavily associated with crime, and these problems are important targets of criminal justice laws. To fight crime, this Act:
-snip-
b. establishes Meth Strike Forces, to focus on drug crime,and a Coordinated Grant Program to improve funding for drug prevention and treatment programs;
c. allows tax credits for contributions to Meth Strike Force and drug prevention or treatment programs;
-snip-
g. replaces the Medical Marijuana Act with a more medically appropriate Marijuana Derivative and Synthetic Cannabinoid Prescription Program to focus help on those with legitimate needs
-snip-
Section 10. In order to reduce abuse of the system currently in place, the people hereby replace the "Medical Marijuana Act" with the following Marijuana Derivative and Synthetic Cannabinoid Prescription Program.
a. Cesamet and marinol are synthetic cannabinoids which are approved by the Food and Drug Administration for treating loss of appetite and for treating nausea.
b. The provisions of this section, relating to Cesamet and Marinol use, may be expanded to include other drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration that include cannabinoids, their derivatives or synthetic cannabinoids, if such drugs are to be used for purposes covered by this section. Such extension shall be by way of rules established by the Department of Human Services, which is authorized to make such rules.
c. When an attending physician or nurse practitioner determines that a patient will likely benefit from use of prescribed Cesamet or Marinol for a diagnosed debilitating medical condition, so as to prevent or mollify decreased appetite or severe nausea, or for control of intractable pain or other symptoms of the condition, and the patient does not have health insurance which covers the cost of such medication, the patient may apply to the Department of Human Services for provision of that part of the cost which is not covered by insurance. The Department of human Services shall promptly process the application and, upon confirming that the application meets the requirements of this Act, shall pay or reimburse the amount necessary to ensure delivery of Cesamet or Marinol to the patient.
d. The Department of Human Services shall establish rules for carrying out this Program. The Department may use the Oregon health Plan as a process for carrying out this Program, if the Department finds this will be efficacious.
e. The purpose of this program is to ensure the availability of Ceasmet and Marinol to patients who need such medication, regardless of coverage by health insurance. Because this is a benefit for Oregonians, at the expense of Oregon's government, no patient is eligible for participation in the Marijuana Derivative and Synthetic Cannabinoid Prescription Program unless the patient has been a legal resident of Oregon for at least one continuous year immediately preceding application for coverage under the Program.
f. The attending physician or nurse practitioner shall monitor the patient's use of Cesamet and Marinol on the same basis as other controlled substances.
g. For purposes of this section:
  • i. "Attending physician" means a Doctor of Medicine or Osteopathy licensed in oregon under ORS Chapter 677.
    ii. "Controlled Substance" has the meaning given in ORS 475.005.
    iii. "Diagnosed debilitating medical condition" means a condition diagnosed by an attending physician or nurse practitioner who determines that the practice is cancer; multiple sclerosis; glaucoma; positive status for acquired immune deficiency syndrome; or any other condition where the attending physician or nurse practitioner believes that a prescription for the use of Cesamet or Marinol is a preferred form of treatment or a preferred form of necessary palliative care.
    iv. "nurse Practitioner" has the meaning given in ORS 678.010.
-snip-
Talking Points
To what "abuse of the MMA does he refer? This would be, it seems to us, a soft place in logic and would require some major evidence to prove. Wonder what it is, huh? There is report after report, study after study that attests that its definitely more efficacious when ingested by smoking or vaporizing as opposed to Marinol. Folks we know have tried Marinol and it was completely ineffective, and had uncomfortable and intractable diarrhea as one side-effect.
Give Mr. Mannix a call and tell him what you think of his crime initiative. Or better yet, fax him with mmj studies and reports. Request that he assist efforts against "abuse" of OMMP by providing the specifics of the evidence for "abuse" which this #104 is "responding" to. Please let him know that you oppose his plan to treat Oregon's sick patients like criminals. You can contact him at:


Kevin Mannix
2003 State Street, Salem OR 97301
Phone: (503) 364-1913 Fax: (503) 362-0513
[email protected].
 

mogie

Well-Known Member
[SIZE=+2]Newberg resident Pamela Sterling is not ashamed of her drug use. Due to chronic illness, the 43-year-old former registered nurse enrolled four years ago in Oregon’s medical marijuana program, one of 231 current members in Yamhill County. Approved by voters in 1998, participants are issued cards identifying them as members on the recommendation of a qualified doctor * a M.D. or osteopath (D.O.) * who has diagnosed them with a qualifying condition such as glaucoma, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease or chronic pain. Enrollment allows members to possess and use marijuana, as well as to grow up to seven marijuana plants for personal use. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=+2]“I used to work as a labor and delivery (OB/GYN) nurse and I injured my neck and shoulder (on a difficult birth),” Sterling said. “I have a lot of muscle tremors and spasms and I used to be on a lot of pills, but medical marijuana has taken the place of that.” Sterling is not alone in her experience. A 2004 study at the University of California in San Francisco has shown that medical marijuana can lower, by up to half, a patient’s narcotics use. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=+2]“They had me on prescription painkillers like Dilaudid and Xanax, and then anti-Parkinson’s medication to deal with the side effects from those,” she said. “At one point they suggested putting me on methadone. I said no. It had gone too far.” But her desire to avoid using potentially addictive, opiate-based medication was not the only reason Sterling turned to medical marijuana. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=+2]She was also diagnosed with coeliac disease. Coeliac disease is an auto-immune disorder in which a patient’s digestive system is unable to digest wheat or wheat gluten (found in many foods), instead causing inflammation and damage to the intestines. Genetic in origin, coeliac disease can often be controlled through a wheat-free diet (substituting rice, corn or potatoes). But following a visit to Brazil for a medical conference, where she caught intestinal parasites from drinking water, Sterling’s digestive issues took a dramatic turn for the worse. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=+2]“I used to weigh well over 250 (pounds), I’m now down to 115 * for a while, I was literally starving,” she said. “I was living in a duplex at the time and my neighbor would hear me (vomiting) in the bathroom through the wall. They brought some weed over and suggested I try it. I’d grown up in southeast Missouri and never even smoked a cigarette ‘til I was in my 30s * but it worked really well to reduce my symptoms.” [/SIZE]
[SIZE=+2]So when Sterling heard that former state representative and political activist Kevin Mannix (R-Salem) was preparing an initiative that would replace Oregon’s medical marijuana program with synthetic alternatives, she decided to speak out. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=+2]“I’m not lighting a joint and trying to stick it in someone else’s mouth,” she said. “I only want the right to medicate myself the way my physicians and I see fit.” Mannix’ proposal, titled “The Oregon Crimefighting Act of 2008,” addresses many more issues than medical marijuana. Among its provisions are a program of tax credits to fund methamphetamine investigation and treatment; stiffer sentences for repeat arrests for drunk driving or sexual offenses; and increasing law enforcement. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=+2]But the act would also require the use of Marinol or Cesamet * pills containing a synthetic form of THC, the active ingredient in marijuana * to be used in place of medical marijuana. This change would “reduce abuse of the system currently in place,” the act states, and the synthetic alternatives would be covered under the Oregon Health Plan. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=+2]“I think that the legislature has failed to address these issues,” Mannix said. “This is about a complete reform of Oregon’s criminal justice system * along with the initiatives 40 and 41 that I’ve already filed, which will establish mandatory minimum sentencing and dedicate 15 percent of lottery proceeds to law enforcement.” Although Mannix attempted to overturn the medical marijuana act as a state legislator in 1999, “This initiative is clearly not about just that,” he said. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=+2]“There needs to be an alternative for people suffering from debilitating diseases, but it’s very clear that the issue (of abusing the current program) needs to be addressed,” he said. “This is very novel * no other state has offered to fully fund a prescription program to take medical marijuana’s place.” [/SIZE]
[SIZE=+2]But data showing widespread abuse of the program is difficult to come by. The Portland Police Bureau investigated 30 cases of illegal sales or fraudulent enrollment by participants * among more than 2,000 enrolled members in Multnomah County. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=+2]“The state police have just started putting together data this year,” said Polk County Sheriff Bob Wolfe, who serves on the Oregon State Sheriff’s Association legislative committee. “We’ve had a few cases in the county where cardholders are growing more than their allotment. We’ve also had cases where people break in and steal their plants. But the sheriff’s association doesn’t have a position on the act as yet * if it gets on the ballot, we’ll weigh in.” [/SIZE]
[SIZE=+2]“Don’t put us in the same category as meth users,” Sterling said. “I’ve heard of people having a card who get busted with 300 plants * but people also sell Xanax and morphine on the street. As a nurse, I’ve seen much more abuse of prescription medications than in this program.” Sterling is also concerned that the details of Mannix’s proposed initiative are unworkable. Members of the medical marijuana program must supply the plant themselves and Sterling said members often trade seeds or cuttings * “there’s no money exchanged.” Using synthetic alternatives, however, could prove expensive for Oregon. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=+2]“A Marinol prescription runs between $800 and $1,000 a month, depending on the dosage,” she said. “There’s over 14,000 patients enrolled in the medical marijuana program, according to the state’s figures. If just half of the patients are low-income or even just lacking health insurance, that’s $6 million per month that the state would have to pay. Mannix wants to create a deficit to kill the program.” Moreover, Sterling added, being forced to use a synthetic pill substitute would harm her personally. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=+2]“I can’t absorb the pill due to my digestive issues. That’s the whole issue with Marinol * those prescription painkillers I still take are in suppository or patch form,” she said. “A lot of people (using medical marijuana) with Crohn’s disease or other intestinal conditions have the same problem.” While the medical marijuana program has been controversial since its inception, Sterling said that open discussion is the solution. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=+2]“I have three kids, ages 19, 21, and 24, and they know I smoke marijuana * they know I’m ill and they’ve seen the symptoms,” she said. “The fear comes with lack of knowledge, lack of education. That’s what I’m trying to correct.” Source: Newberg Graphic (OR) * Bookmark: (Marijuana - Medicinal) [/SIZE]
 

ecto

Active Member
i hope all goes well up there.
crossing my fingers for the oregonians.

i might be moving back there next year and it would be hardtimes if i couldnt legally medicate.
 

sk3tch3

Well-Known Member
“I’m not lighting a joint and trying to stick it in someone else’s mouth,” she said. “I only want the right to medicate myself the way my physicians and I see fit.”
 

SmokerE

Well-Known Member
What about chrones disease...(probably spelled that wrong)...do you think anyone could get a card for that?
 

sk3tch3

Well-Known Member
ive seen people here in cali get a card for being a dumb ass. j/k but seriously, i dont know how it is up there but here docs will "tell" you whats wrong with you...
 

smokinherb

Active Member
hey man i know for a fact yo can get a card for chrones, my cousin has chrones and he has a card!!! so apply man and you should get it, goodluck
 

Halfthrive

Active Member
I'm pushin everyone I know to support the current regulations and vote to restrict employer's from discriminating against medical user's.
 

femalelovin

Well-Known Member
so does anyone here make a living off of selling there greens in oregon, ie legally to shops or being a caretaker?
 

BA142

Well-Known Member
Please....Oregon is the most liberal state in the country. The current MMJ system will stay in place.
 
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