Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lawmaker re-ups his plea for cultivatio­n of medical marijuana

- BY KRISTINA TORRES THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON

ATLANTA — The Georgia lawmaker who wrote the state’s groundbrea­king medical marijuana law has re-upped his call for the state to allow a limited form of cultivatio­n and manufactur­ing, saying he wants to set a tone ahead of the upcoming legislativ­e session.

State Rep. Allen

Peake, R-Macon, is urging families and advocates to contact state representa­tives and senators in their districts over the next three months. He is asking them to tell their stories of how hard it is to obtain the types of cannabis oil now allowed under Georgia’s limited legalizati­on, which passed in 2015.

“We’ve got to come up with some sort of solution,” said Peake, who has called it a “moral responsibi­lity” to help patients who are under doctors’ care to use the oil.

He and other advocates have banded together to form an informal network to help patients obtain the oil, a propositio­n made more fraught because federal law bans interstate transport of any form of the drug. State law does not allow in-state growing of marijuana for medical purposes or allow many manufactur­ers to ship the drugs here, including for legal use of the oil.

But, he said, “We can’t keep up with the thousands of Georgians who want access to medical cannabis oil. We can’t provide it to all of them. The cost, logistics and process is too overwhelmi­ng.”

A big sticking point for both Georgia policymake­rs and law enforcemen­t officials, however, is the federal classifica­tion of marijuana as a Schedule I drug, the most dangerous class of drugs with a high potential for abuse and addiction.

Many Georgia officials, including Gov. Nathan Deal, have said that the federal classifica­tion needs to change before the state’s law can be significan­tly expanded. Other opposition has come from some conservati­ves who are concerned that attempts to expand the law would eventually open the door to legalizati­on of recreation­al use of marijuana, something Peake opposes. U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions asked congressio­nal leaders to undo federal medical-marijuana protection­s and has been strongly critical of any use of the drug.

What Peake wants is a limited allowance for one or two growers and manufactur­ers to operate in Georgia under strict supervisio­n, with permission to only make those forms of the oil currently allowed by law.

Under the law, patients and, in the case of children, families who register with the state are allowed to possess up to 20 ounces of cannabis oil to treat severe forms of 14 specific illnesses, including AIDS, Alzheimer’s disease, cancer, Parkinson’s disease and epilepsy. More than 2,500 patients are currently on the registry.

“We can’t keep up with the thousands of Georgians who want access to medical cannabis oil. We can’t provide it to all of them. The cost, logistics and process is too overwhelmi­ng.”

– STATE REP. ALLEN PEAKE, R-MACON

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Janea Cox, right, whose daughter Haleigh suffers seizures, watches with Rep. Allen Peake, R-Macon, as the Georgia House approves “Haleigh’s Hope Act,” a bill legalizing possession of cannabis oil for treatment of certain medical conditions on March 25,...
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Janea Cox, right, whose daughter Haleigh suffers seizures, watches with Rep. Allen Peake, R-Macon, as the Georgia House approves “Haleigh’s Hope Act,” a bill legalizing possession of cannabis oil for treatment of certain medical conditions on March 25,...

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