While the state actually has had on
the books the concept of legal medical marijuana for almost a quarter of a
century, until this year a legal mechanism to distribute it was missing. That
changed with the enacting of Act 261,
which lays out details for the growing of it, the process to prescribe it, and
how to dispense it, with three different agencies to issue appropriate regulations
to fill in the blanks.
Unfortunately, this rendition seems
to have created more questions and ambiguity than it was intended to resolve.
The law gives first dibs on production to Louisiana State University or
Southern University, and that the LSU
Agricultural Center seems willing to undertake this at one of its 19
locations in the state. But this looks only to cover the cultivation of it, not
the processing into one common medicinal use forms, oil (the law prohibits the
form of rolled leaves designed for smoking or any other raw or crude variant
such as in flakes).
Given that its illegal uses
potentially are widespread and voluminous, plenty can go wrong. The official
federal dispensary at the University of Mississippi, because of the interest in
medical uses of marijuana, has ramped up production to 600
kilograms a year for research purposes. Being that it charges $1,525 for
each, this means a cool nearly $1 million a year heads that way. It’s unlikely
that Louisiana physicians would need to prescribe as much as two-thirds of a
short ton a year, but it’s evident that a production contract could be worth
hundreds of thousands of dollars a year, and political favoritism could play a
role in its awarding.
The nature of the contract,
parameters for which presumably will get set by regulation, also should have
designed into it quality control measures to prevent production of strains
considered more for recreational use than medical. Stringent procedures will
minimize, if not prevent, any product heading out the back door in rolling
paper or ready to be sprinkled on brownies. However, whether the awarding
process can avoid politicization and/or the producing process can keep black
market leakage insignificant remains to be seen. Better might have been to rely
upon importation from larger-scale producers such as Canada and Israel, but the
law requires the entire process to occur within the state.
In addition to the uncertainty over
production aspects, some observers question whether the law
actually will do what it says. They point to its language that mandates
submitting a prescription to any of ten dispensaries in the state (creating an
opportunity for another ten opportunities to politicize contract awarding), but
federal law prohibits doctors from writing these and pharmacists from filling
these. Other states’ laws use the word “recommend” or its variants to not
create a risk that the federal government could take the license of a medical
professional for prescribing a Schedule I drug. For that reason, none may
prescribe or fill these in Louisiana, which in effect would moot the law.
Then there’s the narrow nature of
the new law that allows its use for only three diseases. A couple of dozen or
more uses have been ascribed to medical marijuana, yet only these three made it
into law because the previous law legalizing use mentioned them. The new law
allow for administratively adding more uses, but politics beyond getting a malady
on the list surely will enter this process; this could encourage de facto
legalization for nonmedical use by expanding the list to include ailments
tenuously tied to any relief allegedly provided by marijuana.
Which, actually, includes
practically everything that is claimed that medical marijuana aids. It turns
out that a broad range of studies about its use are most likely to find that it
has no or even negative effects on specific illnesses than any positive effect.
Even the oft-cited use of its oil
to help a form of epilepsy affecting children that many parents swear by
the science finds at best inconclusive evidence that it actually helps.
In light of all of this, the best
thing would be for the state to delay implementing the law and taking a much longer
and harder look at the whole issue. It’s not like pouring cannabis oil like
syrup over buckwheat pancakes was going to happen soon; following the law’s
timeline, assuming no hitches, might
take years anyway. Rules covering all aspects must be promulgated by early
next year, but the Legislature is under no obligation to deal with them at any
time or even to accept them, with the option to refuse to write them into law
and thereby restart the process. It simply should sit on these and take up the
matter again in the regular session next year, this time paying close scrutiny
to research as to whether there are any medical benefits to marijuana and, if
deciding such benefits exist, putting more
effort into insulating the process from political manipulation if not outright
corruption. It also must decide on language that makes the process unambiguously
work, if that’s what it wants.
No doubt the rather half-baked
version that emerged into law came from the myriad of compromising among law
enforcement, medical professionals, advocates of cannabis use, and those wary
of that use’s impact on people and society. If it has to be done, surely a more
thoughtful version should come to fruition with greater care put into it. The
current version brings more trouble than it’s worth, and policy-makers should
act accordingly in neutering it for now and correcting it, if desired, later.
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