in Oregon State:
Legislative Items past and present
2012, Legislative items
I - 9, Oregon Cannabis Tax Act (OCTA). [Legalization]
I - 24, Oregon Marijuana Policy Intiative (OMPI). [Legalization]
Initiative by Sensible Oregon; Removes criminal and civil penalties, for adults
21 and over, for possession, cultivation, and use of marijuana. [Legalization]
Initiative by Sensible Oregon; Removes criminal and civil penalties, for adults
21 and over, for possession, cultivation, and use of marijuana. [Legalization]
Initiative by Sensible Oregon; Removes criminal and civil penalties, for adults
21 and over, for possession, cultivation, and use of marijuana. [Legalization]
2011, Legislative items
SB 777, Removes Conditions from Qualifying List.
HB 3202, Guts OMMA for Law Enforcements Sake.
HB 2982, Denies "Card", and Medicine thereby, for Felony Convictions.
2010, Legislative items
I-28, the Dispensary Initiative
I-73, the Oregon Cannabis Tax Act (OCTA) Initiative
2009, Legislative items
I-28, the Dispensary Initiative
SB 388, changes the Program for Law Enforcement; Decreases amount of marijuana that may be possessed by persons responsible for marijuana grow sites to 24 ounces, etc.
SB 426, Expands ability of employer to prohibit use of medical marijuana in workplace
SB 427, Relates to drug-free workplace policies; Requires applicant for medical marijuana registry identification card to notify employer before using marijuana, etc.
HB 956, Sponsored by COMMITTEE ON JUDICIARY (at the request of Oregon Association Chiefs of Police, Oregon State Sheriffs' Association, Oregon District Attorneys Association, Oregon Narcotics Enforcement Association and Oregon Partnership) -- Modifies definitions related to marijuana for purposes of certain criminal laws; Declares emergency, effective on passage.
HB 957, Modifies provisions of Oregon Medical Marijuana Act; Declares emergency, effective on passage.
HB 958, Modifies provisions in Oregon Medical Marijuana Act related to designated primary caregivers; Declares emergency, effective on passage.
HB 959, Modifies provisions of Oregon Medical Marijuana Act; Declares emergency, effective on passage.
HB 960, Requires Department of Human Services to revoke registry identification card, marijuana grow site registration card or designated primary caregiver identification card of person who refuses inspection; Removes exception from criminal liability for person who refuses inspection; Declares emergency, effective on passage.
HB 2313, a Land Use bill that could effect Dispensarys
HB 2497, Relating to employment; Expands ability of employer to prohibit use of medical marijuana in workplace
HB 2503, Relating to medical marijuana in the workplace; Prohibits discrimination in employment under certain circumstances, etc.
HB 3274, Directs Department of Human Services to establish and operate marijuana production facility and distribute marijuana to pharmacies for dispensing to medical marijuana cardholders and designated primary caregivers, and more.
HB 3371, Relating to driving under the influence of marijuana; declaring an emergency.
2007, Legislative items
SB465, a Fire-em-All-and-let-God-sort-out bill
2005, Legislative items
SB1085, needs your attention
HB2693, the "dumb bill gone bad" bill
HB3457, the "Forfeiture" bill
SB717, the anti-Medical Marijuana bill
SB772, the pro-Medical Marijuana bill
HB2485, the anti-Meth & Marijuana bill
SB294, the Hemp bill
SB397, Denies Benefits
HB2695, DUI & 2nd-Hand Smoke
HB5077, the "Rob the Sick and Dying Pot-heads" bill
2003, Legislative items
HB2939, a previous bad Medical Marijuana bill
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Legislation > Oregon State > S.B. 777.
Info on Senate Bill 777 as well as any related Issues.
Click > here < for list of bills this session.
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Summary:
Sponsored by Senators KRUSE, BATES; Senators GIROD, MONNES
ANDERSON, MORSE
-- Relating to medical marijuana.
> Modifies list of debilitating medical conditions for which
medical marijuana is available and removes power of Oregon Health
Authority to add other debilitating medical conditions to list.
> Requires registry identification cardholder to provide updated
documentation from physician about debilitating medical condition
to authority every six months.
The text on this Bill can be found in PDF format at:
http://www.leg.state.or.us/11reg/measpdf/sb0700.dir/sb0777.intro.pdf
Status:
02/17 (S) Introduction and first reading. Referred to President's desk.
02/23 (S) Referred to Health Care, Human Services and Rural Health Policy, then Judiciary.
03/16 (S) Public Hearing and Possible Work Session scheduled.
Testifying
Each speaker called to testify will have two minutes to address the
committee. The order of testimony may be managed to ensure that all
points of view on these measures are presented.
Staff respectfully requests that you submit 25 collated copies of written
materials at the time of your testimony and, if possible, an electronic
copy of materials provided to staff 24 hours prior to the meeting.
Persons making presentations including the use of video, DVD, PowerPoint or
overhead projection equipment are asked to contact committee staff and
provide an electronic copy 24 hours prior to the meeting.
Whether you want to testify or not, it would be good to come to Salem for any hearings. It
would be especially good to try to schedule a meeting with your Senator -or- Representative
before the meeting, possible.
As with coming to court, if you decide to attend hearings, please dress appropriately and be
polite and respectful.
click here -
http://www.leg.state.or.us/capinfo/
- for Capitol Info, such as directions, phone numbers and maps.
If you cannot attend, Please write and testify.
You can find wording of the measures here:
http://www.leg.state.or.us/bills_laws/
you can listen to the hearings online here
http://www.leg.state.or.us/listn/
Details:
... to medical marijuana; creating new provisions; amending ORS ... medical conditions for which medical marijuana is available and removes power ... AN ACT Relating to medical marijuana; creating new provisions; amending ORS ...
A copy of the Bill may be found online at:
http://www.leg.state.or.us/11reg/measpdf/sb0700.dir/sb0777.intro.pdf
. and here .
http://www.leg.state.or.us/11reg/measures/sb0700.dir/sb0777.intro.html
LTL (Letters-To-yer-Legislator, Editor, Org Director, Biz Owner)
you can send identical emails to every oregon senator (which will show
as individual emails from you, to that senator) by sending To:
orsen@oreg.net
you can send identical emails to every oregon representative (which will
show as individual emails from you, to that representative) by sending
To: orhouse@oreg.net
NOTEs -
MAP's media resource center:
http://www.mapinc.org/resource/
If you go to about the middle of the page you will find the "Style
Guide" with links to:
• MAP Letters to the Editor Archive
• Tips for Getting Letters to the Editor Published, by Platinum Letter
Writer, Robert Sharpe
• Letters to the Editor & Opinion Pieces, American College of Emergency
Physicians
• MAP Three Tips for Letter Writers
• Powerful Paragraphs, ClearWriter's ClearTips
• How to Write Letters to the Editor, Schaffer Library of Drug Policy
• Grammar Bytes!, Grammar Instruction with Attitude
• How to Communicate with Journalists, Fairness and Accuracy in
Reporting
• Letter Writer's Style Guide, by Chris Donald
• Writing Effective Letters to the Editor, 20/20 Vision
respectfully, we suggest two main rules-of-thumb for letter writing
to improve the liklihood of being published.
1. Write short declarative sentences as if you were speaking to a
child, a small animal or a judge.
2. Limit yourself to 150 words.
Best of luck.
Here is .
Examples -
Testimony opposing SB 777
To: Senate Health Committee March 16, 2011
Don’t criminalize patients!
I urge you to reject SB 777. This bill would recriminalize patients. Thousands of patients who now qualify for exemption from arrest and prosecution would become felons if they continue to use medical marijuana. Police would be required to enforce these changes, which would be a terrible waste of resources at a time when Oregon can ill afford it.
Don’t waste our tax dollars arresting patients!
SB 777 alters the list of conditions that qualify patients for the Oregon Medical Marijuana Program eliminating conditions that now qualify patients and repeals the section of the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act that creates an administrative process where the Oregon Health Authority may add to the list of conditions as scientific evidence makes this appropriate.
Under current law, severe nausea, regardless of the cause, may qualify a patient for the OMMP if their physician believes marijuana will help. SB 777 would only allow severe nausea to qualify a patient if it was a result of chemotherapy. Many patients with horrible diseases that cause nausea would no longer be protected from arrest. Even cancer patients would only be protected from arrest while undergoing chemotherapy. There is substantial information that indicates cannabinoids may play a role in curing cancer. But it would be prohibited. Why? Currently seizures, like those caused by epilepsy, are a qualifying condition. SB 777 would criminalize those patients. Currently persistent muscle spasms may qualify a patient. SB 777 would limit this to Multiple Sclerosis.
Marijuana is Medicine
These amendments to the OMMA do not appear to have any basis in science. Rather, these amendments seem to be politically motivated, responding to a misguided, knee jerk reaction that there are “just too many” patients qualifying for medical marijuana. This misconception is based on a gut reaction, not examination of the evidence. Over 3700 different Oregon physicians have qualified patients for the program. There are nearly 50,000 patients in the OMMP because marijuana works. It is not a cure-all, and there are risks, but it is safer than many pharmaceuticals and over the counter drugs.
Fix the process of determining qualifying conditions – don’t repeal it.
ORS 475.334 allows OHA to add conditions. Over the thirteen years of the OMMA there have been several petitions to add conditions. Only agitation due to Alzheimer’s disease has been added and less than 50 patients currently qualify for this condition (the exact number is not reported by OHA because revealing such a small number would pose privacy concerns for those few patients). Just what is the problem here? Repealing ORS 475.334 is going in the wrong direction.
The process for adding qualifying conditions has been too conservative. OHA has rejected petitions to add PTSD, leaving some veterans who fought for their country vulnerable to arrest. How can it be good policy to arrest veterans for something that helps reduce their nightmares? Rather than eliminating this administrative process, the legislature should find ways to improve it. Currently it bogs down because OHA allows marijuana critics who would not allow marijuana for any condition to rule on whether to add new conditions. This has created an impossible catch-22. ORS 475. 334 should be amended to require policy to follow the science.
Don’t Criminalize – Regulate !
SB 777, like most of the other medical marijuana bills introduced this session, seeks to deal with perceived problems with the OMMP by changing the law so that more patients will be subject to arrest for what they inevitably will do – continue to use a medicine that they believe relieves their suffering. This will inevitably fail. When patients lose their exemption from arrest, growing even one marijuana plant or possessing more than an ounce becomes a serious felony. This sends a message to law enforcement that stopping these prohibited acts is a high priority. The criminal justice system will spend millions more on marijuana enforcement. This is a huge waste of resources that will not deter marijuana abuse in any way.
Regulation works
Regulating medical marijuana will minimize the abuse and misuse of marijuana. Regulation requires clear cut reasonable rules that can be easily enforced. Enforcement of good rules relies on civil penalties that generate revenue rather than criminal investigation, arrest and prosecution that cost millions of dollars.
Fix the real problem –
Create a regulated medical marijuana supply system
If there is concern that there are too many OMMA cardholders, then the solution is to create a regulated supply system. The reason there are so many cardholders is because every qualifying patient is currently REQUIRED to have a marijuana garden. Because of that unreasonable requirement, every patient needs a grower and a caregiver to assist them. Prohibiting paying the grower is quaint and creates problems. There may be as many perfectly healthy growers and caregivers as there are patients. Because the OMMA lacks a regulated supply system - like selling quality controlled medical marijuana products in pharmacies or dispensaries – patients are all forced to struggle.
Please table SB 777 and hold hearings on SB 874, which explores allowing patients to buy medical marijuana at pharmacies.
Don’t raise health care costs for patients
SB 777 also requires patients to obtain qualifying paperwork from their physician every six months instead of every twelve. For many patients this will mean paying for a doctor visit that they can’t afford. Doctors are already required by administrative rule to offer follow up care.
SB 777 makes modifications to the OMMA that fail to address any misuse or abuse of marijuana. It misses the mark and should be rejected.
Marijuana penalties do not fit the “crime”
The underlying problem is marijuana prohibition. The OMMA is a band-aid on a broken law.
Please consider creating a workgroup or commission to address these issues.
Thank you,
John Sajo
Director
Voter Power
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Link Summary:
For reference, tools, etc.
-
S.B. 777. Text of the Bill.
-
Index to Bills, and other items. Your Legislation Station.
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ToolShed. Tips, Tools and Tricks.
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the S.B. 777 Bulletin Board
Make a comment, ask a question,
see below for examples.
NOTE: Edit yourself before clicking on the [Leave Your Comments] tab,
what you type is what you get!
If you wish to have an entry deleted, communicate with the webster thru the tool at the
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some Tools from National NORML
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