Okla.’s right not OK with voters’ OK of medical pot
OKLAHOMA CITY — Pot advocates celebrated the culmination of a yearslong effort to ease restrictions on the use of cannabis last month when nearly 60 percent of Oklahoma voters approved medical marijuana.
Oklahoma’s proponents had even included a two-month deadline for the implementation in their measure so as to avoid the years of delays they had seen elsewhere.
But that has not stopped state health officials and the Republican governor from making drastic changes.
Within weeks of the election, they signed off on tough new restrictions, including a ban on the sale of smokeable pot.
The change was supported by groups representing doctors, hospitals and pharmacists who opposed medical marijuana, but infuriated supporters of the state question and has already led to a number of lawsuits.
“It’s like they snatched defeat out of the jaws of victory,” said Chip Paul, who helped write Oklahoma’s medical marijuana state question and push for its approval. “You try to do something the proper way. You follow the rules. And then you win and you get screwed.”
Even in conservative states such as Oklahoma, which became the 30th in the U.S. to legalize medical marijuana, attitudes are shifting in favor of easing restrictions on pot.
But there remains resistance from policymakers, especially in Republican-controlled areas, where the rollout of medical marijuana has frequently been restricted by lawmakers or bogged down in court battles.
After more than 70 percent of Florida voters approved medical marijuana in 2016, the Republican-controlled legislature there imposed a similar ban on smokeable pot. A judge last month ruled that such a ban was unconstitutional.
In Arkansas, 53 percent of voters approved medical marijuana in 2016, but a legal challenge has delayed the program.
Michigan voters approved medical marijuana in 2008, only to be followed by years of court fights.
In Texas, the GOP-led legislature approved a restrictive medical marijuana law in 2015, then proceeded to institute strict regulations. It allowed only three dispensaries in a state of 27 million people and imposed the highest licensing fees in the country.
Marijuana advocates say the restrictions on how medical marijuana can be used or the additional burdens placed on doctors may wind up undermining the initiatives and laws.
“The extent of limitations really serves to deprive people of the key goal, which is letting people use medical marijuana without being punished,” said Karen O’Keefe, director of state policies for the Marijuana Policy Project.
Oklahoma’s State Question 788 , the result of an activist-led signature drive, passed overwhelmingly despite fierce opposition and more than $1 million in spending by chambers of commerce, clergy, doctors, hospitals, law enforcement and pharmacists.
Term-limited Republican Gov. Mary Fallin, who typically doesn’t comment on state questions, said days before the measure passed that it was too loosely written and would essentially allow recreational use.
“It’s like they snatched defeat out of the jaws of victory.”