New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is planning to legalize the use of marijuana for medical purposes, according to a new report from the New York Times.
Cuomo is expected to announce the executive action this week, granting some 20 hospitals the ability to prescribe the drug to patients suffering from “cancer, glaucoma or other diseases that meet standards to be set by the New York State Department of Health.”
The move by Cuomo represents not only the latest victory for marijuana reform advocates, but a landmark in New York drug law history. Once the home of the highly punitive “Rockefeller Drug Laws” enacted by former governor Nelson D. Rockefeller, New York already reduced some of the harshest mandatory minimum drug sentencing requirements with 2004’s Drug Law Reform Act, and this upcoming action by Cuomo may indicate a new approach to drug policy in the Empire State.









