
New Jersey Lawmakers Pass Medical Marijuana Bill

January 11, 2010
By DAVID KOCIENIEWSKI
TRENTON — The New Jersey Legislature approved a measure on Monday that would make the state the 14th in the nation, but one of the few on the East Coast, to legalize the use of marijuana to help patients with chronic illnesses.
The measure — which would allow patients diagnosed with severe illnesses like cancer, AIDS, Lou Gehrig’s disease, muscular dystrophy and multiple sclerosis to have access to marijuana grown and distributed through state-monitored dispensaries — was passed by the General Assembly and State Senate on the final day of the legislative session.
Gov. Jon S. Corzine has said he would sign it into law before leaving office next Tuesday. Supporters said that within nine months, patients with a prescription for marijuana from their doctors should be able to obtain it at one of six locations.
“It’s nice to finally see a day when democracy helps heal people,” said Charles Kwiatkowski, 38, one of dozens of patients who rallied at the State House before the vote and broke into applause when the lawmakers approved the measure.
Mr. Kwiatkowski, of Hazlet, N.J., who has multiple sclerosis, said his doctors have recommended marijuana to treat neuralgia, which causes him to lose the feeling and the use of his right arm and shoulders. “The M.S. Society has shown that this drug will help slow the progression of my disease. Why would I want to use anything else?”
The bill’s approval, which comes after years of lobbying by patients’ rights groups and advocates of less restrictive drug laws, was nearly derailed at the 11th hour as some Democratic lawmakers wavered and Governor-elect Christopher J. Christie, a Republican, went to the State House and expressed reservations about it.
In the end, however, it passed by comfortable margins in both houses: 48-14 in the General Assembly and 25-13 in the State Senate.
Assemblyman Reed Gusciora, a Democrat from Princeton who sponsored the legislation, said New Jersey’s would be the most restrictive medical marijuana law in the nation because it would permit doctors to prescribe it for only a set list of serious, chronic illnesses. The law would also forbid patients from growing their own marijuana and from using it in public, and it would regulate the drug under the strict conditions used to track the distribution of medically prescribed opiates like Oxycontin and morphine. Patients would be limited to two ounces of marijuana per month.
“I truly believe this will become a model for other states because it balances the compassionate use of medical marijuana while limiting the number of ailments that a physician can prescribe it for,” Mr. Gusciora said.
Under the bill, the state would help set the cost of the marijuana. The measure does not require insurance companies to pay for it.
Some educators and law enforcement advocates worked doggedly against the proposal, saying the law would make marijuana more readily available and more likely to be abused, and that it would lead to increased drug use by teenagers.
Opponents often pointed to California’s experience as a cautionary tale, saying that medical marijuana is so loosely regulated there that its use has essentially been decriminalized. Under California law, residents can obtain legal marijuana for a list of maladies as common, and as vaguely defined, as anxiety or chronic pain.
David G. Evans, executive director of the Drug-Free Schools Coalition, warned that the establishment of for-profit dispensaries would lead to abuses of the law. “There are going to be pot centers coming to neighborhoods where people live and are trying to raise their families,” Mr. Evans said.
Keiko Warner, a school counselor in Millville, N. J., cautioned that students already faced intense peer pressure to experiment with marijuana, and that the use of medical marijuana would only increase the likelihood that teenagers would experiment with the drug.
“There are children at age 15, 14 who are using drugs or thinking about using drugs,” she said. “And this is not going to help.”
Legislators attempted to ease those fears in the past year by working with the Department of Health and Senior Services to add restrictions to the bill.
But with Democrats in retreat after Mr. Corzine’s defeat by Mr. Christie, some supporters feared that the Democratic-controlled Legislature — which last week failed to muster the votes to pass a gay marriage bill — would balk at approving medical marijuana.
Mr. Christie added to the suspense Monday, just hours before lawmakers were scheduled to vote, when he was asked about the bill during a press conference within shouting distance of the legislative chambers. He said he was concerned that the bill contained loopholes that might encourage recreational drug use.
“I think we all see what’s happened in California,” Mr. Christie said. “It’s gotten completely out of control.”
But the loophole Mr. Christie cited — a list of ailments so unrestricted that it might have allowed patients to seek marijuana to treat minor or nonexistent ailments — had already been closed by legislators. In the end, the bill received Republican as well as Democratic support.
“This bill will help relieve people’s pain,” said Senator William Baroni, a Republican.
Supporters celebrated with hugs and tears.
Scott Ward, 26, who said he suffered from multiple sclerosis, said he had been prescribed marijuana to alleviate leg cramps so severe that they often felt “like my muscles are tearing apart.” “Now,” he said, “I can do normal things like take a walk and walk the dog.”
AYE!!
Congratulations NJ!!!
More freedom.
Good news
Good news for all the sick people hiding in the closet in new joisey trying to stay natural to treat their pain instead of killing their kidneys and livers with oxys and hydrocodone.
!
Welcome aboard number 14!
Congrats Jersey !
Congrats Jersey !
Woooo Hooooo
Congrats NJ. Wow.....what great news to read first thing in the morning.
Quote "The New Jersey
Quote "The New Jersey Legislature approved a measure on Monday that would make the state the 14th in the nation"
If I'm not mistaken New Jersey would make #15. Didn't Rhode Island just go med after we did?
Michigan 13
Rhode Island 14
New Jersey 15
nope
Rhode Island just added dispensary's
Finally!
Now, New Jersey can, in fact, really be the "Garden State"!!!
I don't like it
It's obviously a good thing for the MM movement and for some sufferers in New Jersey; but it is too closely held by the government and doesn't appear to give Doctors the ability to use this drug like any other for alternative treatments.
At least here a Doctor can write in his/her recommedation if it doesn't fall into one of the predefined catergories of malidies covered; New Jersey doesn't allow this if I understand the story correctly.
Also they plan on using the Kuiper model of closely held predefined dispensaries with no provision for grow your own.
To be honest this reminds me of the current National Heath Care Reform debate and the subsequent bills moving through Congress - the original concepts and fixes are tossed out in order to pass anything before the political winds change - we the people lose this game every time.
Sorry - But this is what happens when you let lawmakers write the laws covering politicaly dicey issues. If you read the story you will notice where Democratic pols bartered away rights in order to pass any MM bill before the Governors office changes next week - politicians are not our friends no matter which banner they campaign under - I offer Gov. Granholme as example "A" and ask you to envision our law had she and her misfit colleagues been able to write it.
Today I feel pity for those NJ patients kicked to the curb in the bargaining process, and hope that this insane war on drugs will finally end soon; so they too can find the relief and increased quality of life MM offers to many human conditions besides the half-dozen or so New Jersey Democrats bargained for yesterday.
absolutely,,,,,
agreed.
Sorry to disagree...
BUT, I would love to be able to drive to one of 6 places here in Michigan to pick up my medicine of choice
that may be possible,,,
IF you qualified. Reading what I read, it seems it will be a squeaky category to fit into.
I qualify
Just hoping for the day this happens here in Michigan.
By all means, keep the caregiver/patient relationship.
But, for patients that don't want to deal with a caregiver and would simply like to be able to drive/walk to a place and pick-up their medicine of choice should be an alternative for all of us.
This law of ours needs to be more patient-friendly
Satamp
I agree it's not perfect, but it is a step in the right direction. I prefer too look at the glass being half full instead of half empty.
You see the glass as half full - others see it as half empty -
I say you got the wrong size glass.
It is a step in the right direction, (which I acknowledged in my first sentence), but it is far from a decent piece of legislation meant to help any and all that could benefit medically from MM.
Mizerman - you are what is known as a problem patient. Because you can't keep a caregiver you blame the system and wish for more regulation. That's my take. You very well may benefit from a dispensary system; but if you lived in New Jersey your impaitient person would have to wait 9 months for the first joint. Patience is not your strongest virtue - How many caregivers did you have the first 9 months of our program?
New Jersey took control of distribution, limited it draconially in my opinion, disallowed mandatory insurance coverage, and will set the price and strains available. Sorry but I look at the track record of Government regulation and I see disaster at every turn.
Great news indeed! Shout out
Great news indeed! Shout out to Hamburg! Love me some New Jersey. 14 states strong.
This law will look much
This law will look much different after changes take place on the federal level.
It will let LEO still go after growers after the feds stop.
It works to protect the status quo.
Nice headlines though.
Hey PB
Did you notice that their leo spokeman uses the same reasoning to not allow dispensaries in New Jersey as the leo here use to push Kuiper type ideas over caregivers?
I am so sick of "the children" crap. By far the most dangerouse substances out there are freely available in liquor and medicine cabinents, and yet the same drunks claiming MM will kill all the children defend legal alcohol on every corner and have one of the highest rates of alcoholism.
Drunken politicians have murdered more children than MM ever will if it is handed out to the children! Quit buying their hypocritical bullshit. That ass Randy Colby managed to run himself over with his own car - drunk in the afternoon when he was supposed to be working. But he's protecting the children! Just shoot me now please.
This law of ours needs to be more patient-friendly
you are right mizerman but its a start their and Satamp makes some good points
Thank You Torey
I think we want additional dispensaries that are NOT State controlled entities operating in conjunction with caregivers. I've heard it said here many times that a caregiver often offers more than just a medicine supply - too bad the patients in New Jersey won't have that option.
I can buy into your comment here
SatAmp. Non state controlled entities would be my preference as well. And any limitation on our patients/caregivers grow rights would be terrible.
But it is Jersey afterall, and Tony Soprano and the boys need der cut...
This aint good...
They are treating it like oxy, and morphine....F that, it's going to do are law more harm than good. Jerzy Government Blows! ...