Democratic Sens. Cory Booker and Kirsten Gillibrand, as well as Republican Sen. Rand Paul, unveiled arguably the most progressive medical marijuana legislation is history on Tuesday.
#Medicalmarijuana is particularly effective for kids w/epilepsy & seizures. Govt should not stand in way of medicine that eases their pain.
— Kirsten Gillibrand (@SenGillibrand) March 10, 2015
Their new bill — The Compassionate Access, Research Expansion and Respect States (CARERS) Act — would end federal prohibition of medical marijuana and also introduce a host of other reforms aiming to curb restrictions on its transport, prescription and availability.
“We need policies that empower states to legalize medical marijuana if they so choose — recognizing that there are Americans who can realize real medical benefits if this treatment option is brought out of the shadows,” Booker told reporters at a press conference Tuesday on Capitol Hill. “Doctors and patients deserve federal laws that are fair and compassionate, and states should be able to set their own medical marijuana policies without federal interference.”
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“Otherwise law-abiding Americans — bankers, business people, veterans, families — are fearful of unnecessary, expensive, life-disrupting investigations and prosecutions,” he added. “Today we join together to say enough is enough.”
The legislation has drawn praise from drug policy reform advocates. “It’s the most comprehensive medical marijuana bill in Congress,” Bill Piper, director of national affairs for the Drug Policy Alliance, told the Washington Post on Monday.
“It really is a comprehensive bill — it would effectively end the federal war on medical marijuana,” added Tom Angell, chairman of the advocacy group Marijuana Majority, in the same report.
The Drug Enforcement Agency currently ranks marijuana in the same classification as heroin, LSD and ecstasy. The bill, if passed, would downgrade its classification by DEA standards and also make it easier to transport between states, more accessible to veterans and less stigmatized when it comes to banks providing loans to businesses that provide it.
“Current federal law turns its back on families in need of this medicine, which doctors want to prescribe to ease pain and suffering,” Gillibrand said on Tuesday. “Senators Booker, Paul and I agree that it’s time to modernize our laws and recognize the health benefits of medical marijuana. The CARERS Act will no longer put politicians between doctors and patients. It will let doctors do their job and give parents every available option to comfort their children.”









