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Marijuana bill shot down in state senate

By Danielle Curtis

Staff Writer

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Published: Friday, October 30, 2009

Updated: Friday, October 30, 2009

 The state Senate voted Wednesday against overriding Governor Lynch’s veto of a bill that would have legalized the use of medical marijuana by severely ill patients whose doctors recommend the drug.

After being passed in the House by a margin of 240-115, the effort to override the veto came to an end in the Senate, where the override fell short by just two votes.

If passed, the override would have made New Hampshire. the 14th state in the country to legalize marijuana use for severely ill patients.

 The bill, which Governor Lynch vetoed due to concerns over the bill’s proposed plans for cultivation and distribution of the drug, would have allowed for the creation of three to five “compassion centers” that would have distributed marijuana to qualifying patients. 

According to Executive Director of the New Hampshire Coalition for Common Sense Marijuana Policy Matt Simon, who had been working closely with patients to support the override, supporters of the override knew it would be hard for it to pass in the Senate.

“We were confident we were going to win in the House,” Simon said. “But we also knew it would be a tall order to get two senators to change their minds… I had hoped the senators would put politics aside and do the right thing, but in the end that didn’t happen.”

Simon also said that while the outcome of the vote was not necessarily surprising, for him and the medical marijuana users he worked with to support the override, it was a huge disappointment.

“I had to make several very difficult phone calls to patients who had been very hopeful,” Simon said. “It was very disappointing.”

Still, Simon said it is impossible for him to look back and not see that progress on the issue of medical marijuana was made.

“A lot of people really came around and learned a lot,” Simon said.  

Simon also said that he is certain that New Hampshire will eventually have a law legalizing the use of medical marijuana.

“I am very confident that it will happen but just not this year,” Simon said. “We’re going to continue working until New Hampshire allows medical marijuana.”

 

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5 comments

Marijuana for Anxiety Relief
Thu Nov 5 2009 21:14
Love the comment above. When the "good ole boys" kick the bucket, we'll have intelligent, competent representatives in place who recognize that over 10,000 people have signed up in one Colorado town for medical marijuana, that the PUBLIC NO LONGER FEELS IT IS A CRIME! Make alcohol illegal. I've never heard of a domestic dispute because the husband was "too high on marijuana and beat his wife to death". Attack real problems. And LISTEN TO YOUR CONSTITUENTS!!!
Richard Steeb
Sat Oct 31 2009 10:59
Bottom line: To keep cannabis illegal while tobacco and alcohol are dispensed freely is *MURDEROUSLY STUPID*.

Richard P Steeb, San Jose California

LLLou
Fri Oct 30 2009 17:29
TYC, you got it exactly right.
What a bunch of losers in the New Hampshire senate. Move to a state where MedMar is legal already.
RFWoodstock
Fri Oct 30 2009 11:23
Valid medicinal value, it’s a victimless crime, the War on Drugs WAY too costly, too many arrests for simple possession, tax it and use the money to pay for health insurance and to reduce the deficit…Need I say more?

Woodstock Universe supports legalization of Marijuana.

Add vote in our poll about legalization at http://www.woodstockuniverse.com.

Current poll results…96% for legalization, 4% against.

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RFWoodstock

TYC
Fri Oct 30 2009 09:06
Don't want cannabis legal? Scared you can't control a controlled substance? Worried more will use it? It's OK. Keep it illegal if you're so scared about it. I'll use the distribution system currently in place. No problem! We can continue to use the drug cartel system of distribution and the government can still control it by...what??? Catching about 5 to 10 percent of the product distributed? That's how it's currently 'controlled'. BTW, If you can't keep it out of a prison, what makes you think you control anything. Either way, I'll still get anything I want within a couple of hours. Period. No questions asked. No one carded. No ID's presented. And all proceeds go into the drug gang's till. It's OK. Business as usual. Geez, you act like it's going away. It's not going anywhere, you just drive it back underground. Oh, by the way, China called and they want you to quit spending their borrowed money on your stupid prohibition. They're nervous and might call in their loans to us for using their money so foolishly. Besides, they noted that your first prohibition didn't work either. How does that go?...Doomed to repeat history. Priceless!






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