Medical Marijuana Bill Introduced in Wisconsin Today
MADISON — At a press conference today, Rep. Mark Pocan
(D-Madison) announced the introduction of the “Jacki Rickert Medical Marijuana
Act,” which would let seriously ill Wisconsin residents use marijuana to treat
their illnesses. The bill would allow patients to grow small amounts of
marijuana to treat a specific set of conditions, as well as permit the
establishment of regulated and licensed cultivation and distribution centers
within the state. A similar bill was introduced last session but was not
passed. Rep. Pocan was joined today by patients and medical professionals who
support medical marijuana rights.
“This
is an issue where people are clearly way ahead of the policy makers,” Rep.
Pocan said. “The Wisconsin Legislature needs to catch up with the public and
pass this bill because making medical marijuana legal is the right and
compassionate thing to do for patients in pain.”
“It
is wonderful that there is such a consistent effort to enact compassionate
legislation in Wisconsin,” said Robert Capecchi, legislative analyst for the
Marijuana Policy Project. “The vast majority of Americans support allowing sick
people to use marijuana to treat their illnesses, and more and more states are
taking steps that reflect that. Plenty of evidence already exists proving the
relative safety and efficacy of marijuana when used to treat a variety of
ailments, and more studies on the potential benefits of marijuana treatments
are being released regularly. The system proposed by this bill would make sure
that qualified patients have safe access to the medicine that works best for
them while protecting them from arrest. No one should be treated like a
criminal just for trying to live a normal life.”
Currently,
16 states and the District of Columbia allow the use of medical marijuana,
including Michigan. Nearby Illinois and Iowa are also considering medical
marijuana bills this year, as are several other states around the country. A
CBS News poll released November 18 showed that 77% of voters nationwide think
medical marijuana should be legal.