Medical marijuana passes Senate committee, awaits floor voteHealthy Care

L-R: Eric Crawford, Jamie Montalvo, Sen. Stephen West and Chris Joffrion spoke in favor of West's medical marijuana bill in the Senate Licensing and Occupations Committee. (Legislative photo)  
By Melissa Patrick
Kentucky Health News

For the first time, a bill to legalize and regulate medical marijuana in Kentucky has cleared a Senate committee after years of the idea being stalled in the upper chamber. 

Senate Bill 47, with a committee substitute, passed out of the Senate Licensing & Occupations Committee March 14 on an 8-3 vote. Republican Sens. Donald Douglas of Nicholasville, Committee Chair John Schickel of Union, and Chris McDaniel of Ryland Heights, cast the "no" votes. 

Senate Majority Floor Leader Damon Thayer of Georgetown, a long-time opponent of medical marijuana legislation, was among those voting in favor of the bill, saying he approved its narrow focus and that his support was for "the sake of those who suffer." 

The 124-page bill, sponsored by Sen. Stephen West, R-Paris, does not allow medical marijuana to be smoked, requires users to be 18 or older or be a caretaker for a child, and would not take effect until Jan. 1, 2025.

The medical marijuana would be allowed for certain "qualifying medical conditions," including all cancers regardless of stage; chronic, severe, intractable or debilitating pain; epilepsy or any other tractable seizure disorder; multiple sclerosis, muscle spasms or spasticity; chronic nausea or cyclical vomiting syndrome that has proven resistant to other conventional medical treatments; post-traumatic stress disorder; and any other medical condition or disease for which the new Kentucky Center for Cannabis Reserach determines would benefit from medicinal marijuana. 

Longtime advocate for medical marijuana Eric Crawford of Mason County, who has been a quadriplegic for nearly 30 years, said marijuana improves the quality of his life and that he and others who benefit from it "deserve legal access without the worry of law enforcement."  

“It allows me longevity and a better quality of life. It allows me to be a better husband, son, friend and man than a pharmaceutical route. Surely there’s nobody on this committee that thinks I’d be better off taking opioids,” he said.

Sandra Marlowe, the sister of Sen. Gex Williams, R-Verona, who is wheelchair-bound due to the debiliating and deadly disease ALS, also asked the committee members to pass the bill. 

“This disease will take my life. I ask that my days be as comfortable as possible with access to the THC tincture. That is the only thing that gives me relief. . . . Without painful cramps, I am more productive," she said. 

Thayer told the Lexington Herald-Leader on Tuesday that the bill had time to get its two required readings for a vote on the Senate floor Thursday, the final legislative day before the veto session. However, he added that he's not sure it has the Senate floor votes to get passed.

If the Senate passes the bill Thursday and gets a reading in the House, the House coulld pass it when the lawmakers return for the last two days of the session, usually reserved fro veto overrides. Medical marijuana bills have passed out of the House twice.

Two people spoke against the bill: Michael Johnson of the Family Foundation and Gene Cole of the Kentucky Ethics League/ Kentucky League on Alcohol, Gambling Problems and Substance Use Disorder

Johnson said the while he is sympathetic to people who have not found relief from their ailment from modern medicine,  there is "insufficient scientific evidence that marijuana is an effective pain relieving agent or that it is safe and effective as a medicine." He also called for "more research"  before it is legalized.


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