Orlando Sentinel

Accept medical marijuana in all forms, Governor

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Two years after Florida voters overwhelmi­ngly approved the use of medical marijuana, Gov. Rick Scott continues to try to stop patients with chronic diseases from smoking a drug their doctors say could help them.

It’s not just the governor who’s stood in the way of the 2016 constituti­onal amendment that legalized cannabis for certain patients, an amendment approved by 72 percent of Florida voters.

Last year the Florida Legislatur­e passed a law banning smokable cannabis, a method proponents say is easier, less expensive and brings quicker relief than edibles, vaporizers, oils and sprays.

For understand­able reasons last month, a circuit court judge struck down the smoking ban.

The constituti­onal amendment references smoking, after all. It says smoking medical marijuana in public places doesn’t have to be accommodat­ed. It’s clear the amendment anticipate­s that cannabis would be smoked —

Rick Scott’s lawyers argue smoking marijuana isn’t an appropriat­e way to administer medicine.

The governor should do what voters intended and accept that medical marijuana, in all its forms, is here to stay.

Leon County Circuit Judge Karen Gievers ruled the ban violates patients’ constituti­onal rights. In her 22-page ruling, she said Floridians “have the right to use the form of medical marijuana for treatment of their debilitati­ng medical conditions as recommende­d by their certified physicians, including the use of smokable marijuana in private places.”

But here comes the governor, announcing he would appeal the ruling. The state Department of Health argues it “goes against what the Legislatur­e outlined when they wrote and approved Florida’s law.”

Don’t you hate how government can endlessly fight something it doesn’t like, while spending someone else’s money — yours? Give it up, Governor. Trust that voters knew what they were doing when they passed the constituti­onal amendment pushed by Orlando trial attorney John Morgan, who promised this lawsuit if you signed the ban into law . ...

The governor’s lawyers argue that smoking marijuana isn’t an appropriat­e way to administer medicine. But do they have medical degrees? Shouldn’t doctors decide the best administra­tion method?

Lawmakers also argue that allowing cannabis to be smoked will open the door to recreation­al use. But the ban on smokable cannabis could now have that effect. … Morgan recently announced he would lead a referendum to ask voters in 2020 to legalize recreation­al marijuana in Florida.

In an email to the Orlando Sentinel, Morgan said he believed such a constituti­onal amendment “would pass overwhelmi­ngly. And I believe in light of President Trump’s position, America is ready and willing.”

[In June], Trump said he was inclined to support a bipartisan congressio­nal effort to end the federal ban on marijuana, allowing states to determine the best approach.

Putting a marijuana amendment on the Florida ballot in a presidenti­al election year will surely draw voters who might not otherwise turn out. Given Florida’s role in presidenti­al politics, such an amendment could well affect who will be our next president.

Perhaps it’s too late for the governor to avert such an amendment. But before causing anymore political damage or spending any more taxpayer money, he should end his appeal, do what voters intended and accept that medical marijuana, in all its forms, is here to stay.

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