Hawai‘i Medical Marijuana Bill
Advances
Another Major Legislative
Hurdle Is Cleared
Reported from the
Hawai'i State Capitol By Pam Lichty
HONOLULU — House Bill 1157,
HD2: RELATED TO MEDICAL USE OF MARIJUANA was passed out by the Hawai'i
House Judiciary Committee late Tuesday, February 29, 2000, on a 7-4 vote.
The Chair, Eric Hamakawa, circulated a "proposed draft" and explained his
proposed changes include some amendments suggested by the Department of
Health, American Civil Liberties Union, and the Drug Policy Forum of Hawai‘i
(DPFH). Other amendments are apparently designed to assuage various expressed
concerns. One amendment reads, "law enforcement agencies seizing live plants
as evidence shall not be responsible for the care and maintenance of such
plants." "They're police, not gardeners," the chair quipped.
They are adding to the definition
of "adequate supply" by specifying that it "shall not exceed an aggregate
amount of BLANK oz. at any time." Hamakawa explained that they want to
check with other states to see what their experience has been thus far
with the various amounts in the initiative statutes (usually 1-2 oz. plus
a specified number of plants).
The third significant, and worrisome,
change is that they have restored a patient registry provision from an
earlier version of the bill that would require a physician who issues written
certification to register the name and address of a patient with both the
Department of Public Safety and the Department of Health.
Hamakawa noted, as Committee members
questioned the various provisions, that there is a lot of refinement left
to do in the language, so this version is by no means set in stone. It
goes next to the House floor for a vote after this Friday (Mar. 3). If
it survives that vote, it crosses over to the Senate.
Meanwhile at the Senate: The Judiciary
Committee will hold public decision-making on their bill, SB 862, SD1,
"RELATING TO MEDICAL USE OF MARIJUANA" on Friday, March, 3, 2000. Don Topping,
President of DPFH said, "When and if these two bills make it to the House
and Senate floors, each and every vote will count. People must contact
their State Representative and Senator or anyone they know there and ask
them to support the legislation."
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