Tag Archives: medical marijuana

State Supreme Court decision underscores importance of Rivers’ Cannabis Patient Protection Act

In the days and years leading up to the recent passage of Senate Bill 5052 Sen. Ann Rivers was the subject of angry emails, death threats, even a published caricature depicting her with fangs – all over what critics said was her lack of concern for medical-marijuana patients.

Rivers’ Cannabis Patient Protection Act aligns the wholly-unregulated medical-marijuana industry with the tightly-constrained recreational marijuana market approved by voters through Initiative 502 in 2012.

“The moment I introduced this legislation almost three years ago, my office phones lit up. Those who had been making their living – and a very good living at that – preying on those who relied on medical marijuana for relief, as well as providing children with unfettered access to marijuana, mounted a vicious campaign to paint me as the anti-patient lawmaker,” said Rivers, R-La Center.

The value of Rivers’ years of work to legitimate medical-marijuana patients was confirmed Thursday when the state Supreme Court issued its decision in State of Washington v. William Michael Reis. In that case the defendant, identified as Mr. Reis, was charged with manufacturing a controlled substance after a search of his home produced evidence of a marijuana-grow operation. Reis’ defense had claimed the operation was for growing medical marijuana and the search warrant was invalid based on Washington’s medical marijuana law.

The Supreme Court determined that Washington’s medical-marijuana law “does not support the conclusion that the medical use of marijuana is not a crime.” The court went on to state that under current law, patients would only be protected from arrest if they joined a medical-marijuana registry. However, an effort to establish such a registry was vetoed by former Gov. Chris Gregoire in 2011. As a result registration was impossible, leaving Reis and other medical-marijuana patients with only an affirmative defense.

Rivers’ SB 5052 will establish the registry referred to by the Supreme Court. Patients and providers who sign up with the medical-marijuana authorization database will be protected from arrest as long as they are otherwise in compliance with Washington’s medical-marijuana law. The database is required to be in place by July 1, 2016. From then on patients and providers who register will be able to grow cannabis for their medical use without fearing arrest. Those who choose not to participate in the registry will not be afforded that protection.

“Despite the loud cries of those who did not actually represent the true patient, the Senate majority, the House majority and the governor did the right thing, as has been illuminated brilliantly by the Supreme Court’s ruling.

“My goals all along were for legitimate patients to have a safe, clean and adequate supply of their product, to keep our children from having easy access to marijuana and to eliminate the black and gray markets that pose a threat to Washington,” said Rivers.

Medical-marijuana market remains at risk, bill fails in final hours

In a disappointing turn of events late today, the House of Representatives failed to reach an agreement on Sen. Ann Rivers’ bipartisan medical-marijuana measure before the Legislature adjourned for the year.

Rivers said the fiscal details that ultimately caused the bill’s demise weren’t enough of a reason to leave patients in the dark without any protection.

“I don’t think people realize what a blow this is to the medical-marijuana community,” said Rivers, R-La Center. “I am legitimately fearful for the patients who rely on medical cannabis because the medical market remains completely unregulated, which leaves a lot of room for the federal government to intervene or even shut down the entire medical-marijuana system in our state. Without this legislation, 14 year-olds are still able to access medical marijuana authorizations without their parents’ consent.

“I think patients should plan to use and pay for recreational marijuana because as it stands today, Washington’s medical-marijuana market is outside its legal bounds and was actually deemed ‘untenable’ by the U.S. Attorney General’s office,” warned Rivers.

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Rivers takes lead to regulate medical marijuana market

OLYMPIA…Marking the recent release of rules from Washington’s Liquor Control Board for the recreational marijuana market, Sen. Ann Rivers is doubling down on her commitment to pass legislation in 2014 that would regulate and license the medical cannabis industry under a separate set of rules from Initiative-502.

“The passage of I-502 created a loophole on a largely unregulated industry,” said Rivers, R-La Center. “Now that the citizens of Washington state have made recreational marijuana use the law of the land, someone needed to step up and create much needed parameters on the medical use side. Many of the rules regarding authorizations need tightening up. Right now minors under the age of 18 can obtain medical cannabis without their parents’ knowledge. To me this is a problem.” Continue reading