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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NV: Advocates Of Medical Marijuana File Petition Signatures On Deadline
Title:US NV: Advocates Of Medical Marijuana File Petition Signatures On Deadline
Published On:1998-06-17
Source:Las Vegas Sun (NV)
Fetched On:2008-09-07 08:10:49
ADVOCATES OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA FILE PETITION SIGNATURES ON DEADLINE

CARSON CITY, Nev. - Advocates of a plan to authorize marijuana for medical
treatment in Nevada met a Tuesday deadline for securing a spot on the
November ballot.

Petitions were handed to clerks in 13 of Nevada's 17 counties, the bare
minimum under state law. Ballot status won't be known until the clerks
check to see if the petitions have at least 46,764 signatures.

Counties that didn't get the "Nevadans for Medical Rights" petitions
included Carson City, Lincoln, Storey and Eureka, the secretary of state's
office said.

The proposal would have to win voter approval this November and again in
November 2000 before it could take effect.

The big concern for backers of the petition was whether they'd comply with
the law that requires the minimum number of petition signers to include 10
percent of the voters in at least 13 counties.

NMR spokesman Dan Hart of Las Vegas said the number of signatures wasn't
the problem - but the geographical requirement presented a roadblock.

NMR is part of the same group that launched a successful 1996 medical
marijuana petition in California. But a big legal battle developed over
distribution through "cannabis clubs."

However, Hart has said the problems in California shouldn't happen here.

"The way this is worded, once it is passed it will be policed
appropriately," he added.

And even though Nevada's laws against marijuana are much harsher than
California's, Hart predicted the initiative would succeed because the
state's voters are "fiercely protective of individual rights."

Under the plan, marijuana could be used by anyone suffering from cancer,
glaucoma, AIDS, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, or from severe nausea caused
by other "chronic or debilitating medical conditions."

A person who wants to use marijuana would need a go-ahead from a doctor,
and any use of the drug by a minor would have to be approved in writing
both by a doctor and the minor's parents.

A registry of patients authorized to use marijuana for medical purposes
would be available to police if they needed to verify a claim of legal use.

A final section says an insurer wouldn't have to reimburse a health care
policyholder for the cost of buying marijuana, and an employer wouldn't
have to make accommodations for pot-smoking by sick employees.

Despite the careful wording, the Nevada Medical Association and some law
enforcement groups have said they won't back the initiative petition.

The 1,100-member NMA says it doesn't believe there have been enough
scientific studies to show marijuana is a valuable tool in helping people
with diseases such as cancer.

Checked-by: Richard Lake
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