Porterville Recorder

Judge: California child can take cannabis drug to school

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SANTA ROSA — A California kindergart­ner can keep bringing a cannabis-based drug used for emergency treatment of a rare form of epilepsy to her public school, a judge ruled Friday.

The Santa Rosa Press-democrat reported that a judge sided with the family of 5-year-old Brooke Adams.

The Rincon Valley Union School District in Santa Rosa sought to ban the ointment from school grounds because it contains the active ingredient in marijuana.

Authoritie­s argued that allowing Brooke to use the drug at school violated state and federal laws barring medical marijuana on school grounds.

Medical marijuana use in private with a doctor's recommenda­tion is legal in California.

A judge's temporary order permitted Brooke to start school in August while the district's objections were considered. A nurse accompanie­s Brooke to school and has had to apply the oil three times to treat seizures.

Judge Charles Marson made the order permanent on Friday. Marson is a judge in the state office of Administra­tive Hearings' Special Education Division, which handles disagreeme­nts between school districts and parents of children with disabiliti­es.

"I was so overwhelme­d with emotion and joy that we don't have to fight anymore after a battle of over two years," said Jana Adams, the girl's mother. "She can just go to school like any other child and we don't have to keep pushing to get what she needs."

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