Americans for Safe Access
Monthly Activist Newsletter
Defending Patients' Access to Medical Marijuana
May 2008
Volume 3, Issue 5
California Medical Marijuana Employment Rights Bill Advances
Legislation Moves to Assembly with Committee Approvals, Union support
An ASA-sponsored bill that would establish employment rights for medical
marijuana patients in California advanced through the state Assembly last
month. With support from three unions representing nearly 1 million workers
in California, AB 2279 passed through both the Assembly's Labor and Employment
and Judiciary committees on party-line votes. The bill will be voted on
next by the Assembly, before passing to the state senate and then the governor's
desk.
The new employment rights bill prohibits discrimination against patients
but leaves intact existing state law prohibiting medical marijuana consumption
at the workplace and protects employers from liability by allowing exceptions
for jobs where physical safety could be a concern.
California joins Oregon and Hawaii in considering laws to protect medical
marijuana patients from employment discrimination.
ASA Chief Counsel Joe Elford
"We're grateful for the support of the state legislature in preserving
the rights of patients to work and be productive members of society,"
said ASA Chief Counsel Joe Elford. "With the jobs of thousands of sick
Californians hanging in the balance, we are hopeful that the full Assembly
will act in similar fashion to the Labor and Judiciary Committees."
ASA lobbying for the bill helped garner the endorsement last month of the
statewide California Labor Federation, Service Employees International Union
(SEIU) and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees
(AFSCME), all powerful unions whose voices in defense of workers are listened
to in California's capital. ASA also secured support from the National Lawyers
Guild and several HIV/AIDS advocacy organizations.
Introduced in February by Mark Leno (D-San Francisco) and sponsored by
ASA, AB 2279 is designed to rectify a January ruling by the California Supreme
Court that found employers can fire patients for using medical marijuana,
even when they are entitled to do so under state law. That landmark case,
Ross v. RagingWire, was argued before the supreme court by ASA's Elford.
Gary Ross, speaking to the media
Assemblymember Leno and the other authors of California's Medical Marijuana
Program Act (SB 420) had filed a 'friend of the court' brief in support
of Gary Ross, the engineer who lost his job at RagingWire Telecommunications
in 2001 after failing a drug test. Ross had told his employer that he used
medical cannabis on his doctor's advice to treat injuries sustained during
his military service, but RagingWire terminated him anyway.
The legislation that would reverse the Ross decision has moved quickly
because Assemblymember Leno and ASA were prepared for an adverse ruling
by the court, having begun drafting the bill last year. In addition to Assemblymember
Leno, the bill's co-authors are Patty Berg (D-Eureka), Loni Hancock (D-Berkeley)
and Lori Saldaņa (D-San Diego). More about the bill can be seen at
www.AmericansForSafeAccess.org/AB2279.
ASA has received hundreds of reports of employment discrimination in California
since 2005. Employers that have been accused of discriminating against patients
include Costco Wholesale, UPS, Foster Farms Dairy, DirecTV, the San Joaquin
Courier, Power Auto Group, as well as several construction companies, hospitals,
and various trade union employers.
New Patient Bill in Congress
In other legislative news, a new bill to protect medical marijuana patients
is also being considered in Washington, DC.
Representative Barney Frank (D-MA) introduced the "Medical Marijuana
Patient Protection Act," HR 5842 last month. The act would change federal
policy on medical marijuana in a number of ways.
It would reclassify marijuana to make it available by prescription and
create a regulatory framework for the FDA to begin a drug approval process
for marijuana. The act would also prevent interference by the federal government
in any local or state run medical marijuana program.
The bill is co-sponsored by Representatives Maurice Hinchey (D-NY), Sam
Farr (D-CA), Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA), and Ron Paul (R-TX).
Conference on Cannabis Therapeutics a Success
Last month, several of ASA's Medical and Scientific Advisory Board members
- including Philippe Lucas, Rick Doblin, Ph.D, Robert Melameade, Ph.D, and
Jahan Marcu. - were among the experts, researchers and physicians presenting
at the Fifth National Clinical Conference on Cannabis Therapeutics, hosted
by national non-profit group Patients Out of Time at Asilomar Conference
Center in Pacific Grove, California.
ASA had a booth at the conference and made contact with researchers, doctors
and activists from across the country and the world. ASA staff was joined
by members, chapters, and affiliates from all over the country, including
representatives from California, Hawaii, Maryland, Missouri, Montana, New
Jersey, and North Carolina.
While there, ASA Field coordinator Sonnet Seeborg Gabbard and Carson Higby-Flowers
filmed several testimonials of patients and researchers that are being posted
on ASA's blog
and YouTube.
Highlights from the conference,include Dr. Donald Tashkin's presentation
of various research that demonstate even long-term heavy cannabis smoking
does not increase cancer risk and Dr. Steve Hosea's talk about the need
for "evidence-based" medical cannabis research to underscore our
efforts to educate lawmakers and physicians.
Chris Conrad discussed the problems with current cannabis cultivation limits,
noting that even California law does not allow patients to produce amounts
established by the federal IND program.
Dr. Arno Hazekamp talked about why cannabis tea is one of the two recommended
methods of medicinal cannabis consumption by the Dutch government. Dr. Natalya
Kogan from Hebrew University in Jerusalem presented information on the potential
of CBD, one of the cannabinoids in marijuana, for protecting against an
array of conditions from diabetes to Alzheimer's.
Dr. Mark Ware from McGill University in Canada shared his findings from
a placebo-controlled clinical trial that showed the effectiveness of higher-potency
cannabis in reducing neuropathic pain and increasing quality of sleep.
Dr. Donald Abrams of San Francisco General Hospital and UCSF medical school
discussed why cannabis should be part of palliative care and pain management.
Dr. Juan Sanchez-Ramos presented an overview of cannabinoid research on
movement disorders such as Parkinson's and Huntington's. And ASA Medical
Advisory Board member Rick Doblin, PhD discussed the struggle to end the
federal government's monopoly on the supply of cannabis available for research
as a means to expand therapeutic research in this country.
ASA Chapter Update: New Jersey
by Ken Wolski, RN, MPA
One of the many active local ASA chapters and affiliates working to defend
patients and their caregivers is the Coalition for Medical Marijuana - New
Jersey (CMMNJ).
For the past several months, the CMMNJ has been trying to capitalize on
the American College of Physicians' January 2008 position paper supporting
medical marijuana. Members of CMMNJ have written press releases, letters
and OPEDs and sent them to such organizations as the American Medical Association
and the New Jersey Medical Society, as well as media outlets - all highlighting
this important endorsement of medical marijuana. CMMNJ is using the endorsement
of physicians and scientists to keep the issue current in New Jersey and
gain national support for rescheduling marijuana from a Schedule I drug
to a more appropriate classification.
To stay abreast of the latest research advances, CMMNJ members Ken Wolski
and Jim Miller attended the group's Fifth National Clinical Conference on
Cannabis Therapeutics last month. The conference brought some of the leading
researchers from across the country and around the world together with medical
marijuana patients and advocates. Both Ken and Jim are on the Advisory Board
of the sponsoring organization, Patients Out of Time.
CMMNJ is also working with NORML and Drug Policy Alliance to urge citizens
to tell NJ legislators to support the "NJ Compassionate Use Medical
Marijuana Act" (S-119 & A-804).
As part of educating the public, CMMNJ members are making their voices
heard in the media. Jim Miller had two letters to the editor published in
the Asbury Park Press recently. Ken's letter "Smoke Screen to Marijuana
Therapy" was published in the Times of Trenton, and Scott Ward's article,
"For an MS patient, this drug makes all the difference," was published
by the Newark Star Ledger.
CMMNJ also participated in this year's Drug Peace March in Philadelphia
on May 3 in conjunction with PhillyNORML. CMMNJ continues to have monthly
public meetings at the Mercer County Library in Lawrence Township, NJ on
the second Tuesday of each month, from 7 to 9 pm.
To enhance its fundraising, CMMNJ has obtained designation as a 501(c)(3)
organization by the IRS, so contributions to the group are now income tax
deductible. CMMNJ plans to send a letter to supporters as a fundraiser and
is also continuing to seek grant money to supplement merchandise sales (t-shirts,
wristbands, lapel pins and DVDs).
A special fund-raising event to commemorate the 5th anniversary of the death
of Jim Miller's wife Cheryl will be held June 7 at a location in Ocean County,
NJ from 2 to 6pm.
NATIONAL ACTION ALERT: Act Now to Protect
Medical Cannabis Patients and Caregivers!
Representative Barney Frank (D-MA) along with a small bi-partisan
coalition of members of Congress have introduced H.R. 5842, the Medical
Marijuana Patient Protection Act. If passed, this legislation would, among
other things, reschedule marijuana from a Schedule I to Schedule II drug
according the Controlled Substances Act and provide clearer protections
for qualified patients, caregivers, and safe-access sites authorized by
state or local law. Take action now to protect patients and their caregivers!