New Jersey School First in Nation to Allow Medical Marijuana

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New Jersey School First in Nation to Allow Medical Marijuana
by Christina Sarich
Posted on November 15, 2015

A school nurse at one school in Vermont has refused to give a young girl CBD oil (even though it isn’t made from cannabis, but rather hemp) for her recurring seizures, but not everyone is being deprived of this medicine. Recently, another 17-year old has won a legal battle in New Jersey to consume cannabis oil during her school lunch period.

Smokeless medical marijuana will now be allowed at the first school in the United States following New Jersey Governor Chris Christie’s signing of a bill that supports Genny Barbour’s right to treat her epileptic condition while attending a school in the Maple Shade School District. No other school currently allows cannabis to be used while on school property.

Barbour lost a lawsuit filed by her family, but the lark School Board revisited her request to consume medical marijuana while on school property. Previously, the board insisted that using any form of cannabis while on school grounds would go against the drug-free school zone laws. The new rules developed by the board will give students with conditions like Barbour’s the ability to use medical marijuana on school premises.

Susan Weiner, executive director of Larc School, said in a statement:

“I’m thrilled that we have been able to reach this point. We’re about helping children. I know there are so many kids in this state and across the country who can benefit from this. We’re grateful that our legislators recognized it’s a sincere need that helps students, because we do see the difference.”

The bill, which was approved by the State Legislature over the summer and then signed into law on Monday by Governor Christie, provides a legal shield for schools and other operations serving disabled patients that want to administer medical marijuana.

New Jersey’s latest medical marijuana law will enable Barbour to consume a single dose of cannabis oil at The Larc School, however, the law dictates that only a member of the family or a registered caregiver can give the medication under the supervision of a school staff member.

This has forced Genny’s parents, Roger and Lora Barbour, to continue in their legal battle. Barbour’s parents want a school nurse to be able to give their daughter the medical marijuana during the school day as she needs it.
 
NY Governor Expedites Legal Pot for Critically Ill Patients
by Julie Fidler
Posted on November 14, 2015

In light of medicinal value of cannabis.

Life is about to get a little bit easier for critically ill patients in New York, where Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed 2 bills into law recently that will establish an “emergency medical marijuana” program individuals can use to resolve their ailments.

The passage of a 2014 law added New York to a list of nearly 2 dozen states where medical marijuana is available to patients. Today’s signing of the 2 bills accelerates how quickly critically ill patients are able to legally utilize cannabis, particularly those whose lack of access to the drug “would pose a serious risk” to their lives, such as people suffering from cancer or seizures.

Cuomo inked the bills just shy of a midnight deadline and came after patients, families, supporters and some celebrities had spent months pressuring the state’s government to take action to allow emergency access to medical marijuana. [1]

“We’ve been waiting an outrageous 15 months for expedited access to medical marijuana,” Missy Miller of Atlantic Beach, whose son Oliver suffers from life-threatening seizures, told Drug Policy Alliance. [2]

Advocates were uncertain whether legal medical cannabis would become a reality in New York, as Gov. Cuomo initially said only that he would review the bill. He only embraced the 2014 Compassionate Care Act after insisting that the State Police and the Health Department would have extensive oversight of medical marijuana’s distribution. Under the law, 5 organizations may produce and distribute the drug through 20 dispensaries statewide, and the marijuana must be sold in New York.

The state’s full medical cannabis program is expected to be fully operational by January 2016.

“Patients in New York have waited long enough for legal access to medical cannabis,” said Roger Volodarsky, founder and CEO of Brooklyn-based vaporizer technology company Puffco.

“It’s outrageous that they have been forced to go years without relief while politicians procrastinate, but this new law means that the day when those who need marijuana-based medicine will be able to safely obtain it from legal businesses will be here sooner rather than later,” he said.

Gov. Cuomo said that under the bills, the program will require more organizations for producing the drug as soon as feasible, and to waive the “tight controls” of the Compassionate Care Act, though he was not specific about what that meant. He also said that the program would give preference to organizations or groups producing cannabis in other states that might be able to provide the drug more quickly.

The Governor was quick to note that he still recognizes that marijuana is still illegal at the federal level, and asked that the new emergency program follow 2013 guidelines set by the U.S. Justice Department.

Sources:

[1] The New York Times

[2] Extract

Featured image from TheDailyChronic
 

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