Showing posts with label alabama medical marijuana laws. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alabama medical marijuana laws. Show all posts

Friday, March 14, 2008

Medical Marijuana at the Statehouse: 2008

From DRCNet

A dozen years after California voters ushered in the age of legal medical marijuana by supporting Proposition 215, the legal use of the herb for medicinal purposes has spread to 11 other states -- Alaska, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington -- but in recent years, progress has been excruciatingly slow.

The last statewide initiative to go to voters failed in 2006 in South Dakota -- the only state where voters have rejected an initiative legalizing medical marijuana -- and last year, it took Herculean efforts by New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson (D) to revive and rescue the medical marijuana bill there, making the Land of Enchantment the only state to be added to the list of medical marijuana states in 2007. (Rhode Island legislators, who had passed a sunsetted bill in 2006, made it permanent last year.)

This year, serious efforts to pass medical marijuana laws at the state house are underway in several more states, with most of the efforts being run by local groups backed by either the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP) or the Drug Policy Alliance (DPA). Here's a look at the states where there has been or will be action at the state house on medical marijuana:

Alabama: A medical marijuana bill was introduced last week by Rep. Laura Hall (D), but has yet to be assigned a bill number. This will mark the second year in a row that Alabama legislators have had a medical marijuana bill before them. There will be hearings this year, said Loretta Nall, executive director of Alabamians for Compassionate Care, the local group coordinating the effort to pass the bill.

One of those who will testify is Jacki Phillips, whose son, Michael Phillips, had testified in support of medical marijuana in the past. Michael Phillips, who throughout his life suffered from seizures related to brain tumors, died last December in a New Orleans hotel room during the DPA conference.

"I'm going to tell those lawmakers that the system killed my son," said Phillips. "I truly believe that if he could have gotten the marijuana and it had been regulated like other seizure medicines, he would be alive today. I'm not asking them to legalize it for potheads," she said, "I'm a Southern Baptist and I believe God gave you a brain to use, but using marijuana for medical purposes would help a lot of people."

Marijuana didn't stop Michael Phillips' seizures, his mother said, "but it gave him the chance to function on a normal level for a period of time." When he smoked marijuana, she said, he would still have seizures, but their frequency and intensity was greatly reduced.

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Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Funeral Arrangements for Michael Paul Phillips

The viewing for Michael Phillips will be on Wednesday, Dec. 12, 2007 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Brookside Funeral Home.
3360 Brookside Dr
Millbrook, AL 36054
(334) 285-7442
Get directions

Funeral services are set for Thursday, Dec. 13, 2007 at 10 a.m. at Brookside Baptist Church in Millbrook, AL.


Thursday, August 09, 2007

Medical Marijuana in the Montgomery Advertiser

There is a great letter in today's opinion section of the Montgomery Advertiser entitled, Relax Medical Marijuana Laws and there is a great discussion as well. Please pop on over and join in.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Let Doctors Treat Their Patients

Anna Alldredge is a member of Alabamians for Compassionate Care and her letter was published in today's Birmingnham News. Way to go Anna!!!

Let doctors treat their patients:
I write in response to the patient for whom the only effective seizure prevention is cannabis. How did we come to demonize a plant?

We trust a doctor to prescribe morphine but not marijuana. This is ridiculous and represents special interests at work. The drug, liquor and tobacco interests lobbied the government to call their substances OK (which they are not) and cannabis to be evil and destructive.

And then there is the issue of job security for drug interdiction workers at all levels.

It is high time we let doctors treat these pitiful people without government interference.

Anna Alldredge

Crestline Gardens