The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Legalize cannabis oil only for kids

- By Wiley Griffin Wylie Griffin is sheriff of Decatur County and president of the Georgia Sheriffs’Associatio­n.

The sheriffs of Georgia have made it clear they will aggressive­ly oppose legislatio­n that legalizes marijuana for recreation­al, religious or other social purposes. Further, they oppose the cultivatio­n of marijuana in Georgia for any reason, including marijuana grown for medical purposes.

The ongoing legislativ­e discussion resulting from House Bill 1 about legalizing cannabis oil for the treatment of a wide variety of medical conditions remains quite perplexing to the sheriffs. It is their belief decisions of this nature must first be reached by the Federal Drug Administra­tion after appropriat­e study by the medical research community. To the sheriffs, it is ill-advised to proceed otherwise, as this is a the discussion best led by our trusted medical community.

Notwithsta­nding this strong feeling to the contrary, last year, Georgia’s sheriffs heard the pleas of families with children suffering seizure disorders and supported House Bill 885, which allowed for the limited use of very low-THC cannabis oil for these children upon the recommenda­tion of a physician.

It is the opinion of Georgia Sheriffs’ Associatio­n members that this year’s House Bill 1 simply goes too far by dramatical­ly expanding the number and types of medical conditions for which cannabis oil with a much higher THC content can be possessed. To qualify for this much higher THC-content oil, one simply needs a physician’s diagnosis of one of the more-than 17 listed illnesses or disorders, which includes maladies as common as muscle spasms.

Under the bill, physicians are not required to prescribe or even recommend the oil; they would simply render a diagnosis that would then allow a person to obtain and possess the oil with immunity from prosecutio­n. The bill provides no mechanism for inspection of the oil for content or purity by any agency, nor does it establish limitation­s on the amount of oil that can be possessed. Omissions such as these will most assuredly result in a plethora of unintended consequenc­es and make enforcemen­t efforts extremely difficult.

It has been well-establishe­d in Georgia law that the office of sheriff has a duty to protect the public. Sheriffs have a unique responsibi­lity to speak to issues that, in their opinion, make Georgians less safe. The sheriffs fear expanding the number of medical conditions and symptoms beyond the original proposal for the treatment of seizure disorders in children, along with the use of higher-THC-content marijuana oil as provided for under House Bill 1, will eventually lead to commonplac­e usage of the oil for abusive non-medicinal purposes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States