Most polled in Montana prefer to repeal marijuana regulation
A slim majority of Montanans favor repealing the law legalizing medical marijuana, but in response to another question, a much larger percentage support tightening regulations on the industry rather than terminating the law, a new Lee Newspapers poll shows.
When asked whether they would support or oppose repealing the 2004 state law legalizing medical marijuana, 52 percent said they’d support repeal and 38 percent opposed it. Ten percent were undecided.
In response to another question, however, 83 percent of voters said they favor enacting stricter regulation and licensing requirements for medical marijuana in the state. Thirteen percent opposed tightening the law, while 4 percent were undecided.
Medical marijuana issue heats up in Montana Legislature
The Montana Medical Marijuana Act is once again coming under fire in the state legislature. More than 150 people crowded into the Capitol in Helena on Friday as the Senate Judiciary committee addressed a bill which would repeal the Medical Marijuana Act.
The bill is sponsored by MT State Representative Mike Milburn (R-Cascade), who says there is no way to rein in the medical marijuana industry. Milburn says the rapid increase in the number of medical marijuana cards is out of control. He says it is a strain on law enforcement and it is getting into the hands of children.
Milburn's bill has already passed the House in a 63-37 vote. Now the bill is before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Montana House votes to repeal medical marijuana
State lawmakers are halfway to repealing Montana's medical marijuana law. By a vote of 62-to-37, legislators voted to advance the bill out of the House to the Senate.
House Speaker Mike Milburn says law enforcement can't control the sudden growth of the multi-million dollar industry and its rampant proliferation.
"It's going well beyond what people in Montana thought they were voting for," said Milburn, (R-Cascade). "Lots of support from the community, from the schools, from the law enforcement agencies, even from out of state law enforcement, that you can't control it. You can't put sideboards on it. You can't regulate it when it's gone this far."
Montana Poll: Leave cannabis law in place
This week’s Question of the Week received a heavy turnout in our unscientific online poll and no shortage of thoughtful comments on both sides of the issue. We asked whether the Legislature should overturn Montana’s medical marijuana law, which was approved by a ballot initiative in 2004.
Among more than 4,000 votes cast as of late Friday afternoon, 2,417 said the lawmakers should leave the law in place, while 1,666 votes came in in favor of repeal. Here’s a sampling of some of the comments from those who took the time to write:
- “The Republican manufactured hysteria is completely at odds with reality. They ignore many well-established statistics, such as high school pot use being down 27 percent, in favor of an anecdote or two. Anecdotes like kids are prostituting themselves for pot, our schoolyards are knee-deep in pot, and Montana, as a new drug central, now deserves mention in the same breath as Mexico and South America. I’m getting very tired of uninformed Repub’s catering to the religious right, and telling me how I must live my life. I wonder how many of these same Repub’s are getting big campaign donations from the alcohol industry?”
Medical marijuana debate coming to Helena, Montana
The Montana Legislature will hear the first of several medical marijuana bills on Friday.
House Bill 68 would change the current law, passed by voters in 2004 and people on both sides of the medical marijuana debate say the current Montana law needs changing.
"It's been up to us as caregivers for the most part to self regulate ourselves," said Mark Higgins, owner of medical marijuana store, Montannabis, Inc. In Billings. "Not everybody is good at that. And I think that's where a lot of the problems came in at."
Medical Marijuana Takes Root, cannabis grows from the earth indeed
With distribution locations across the state, Michael Smith claims to have the largest medical marijuana collective in Montana, at least in terms of geographical range. But there is one obvious missing link in his network: Northwest Montana. That’s about to change.
Sometime this month, a branch of The Healing Center, Smith’s Bozeman-based collective, will open in Kalispell. Polson and Whitefish are next, though Whitefish has imposed a temporary moratorium on all medical marijuana businesses.
Smith said he hopes to work with city officials in Whitefish to change the language of its urgency ordinance to take away the limit of three patients per caregiver. As written now, caregivers with three patients or fewer operate under a “home occupation” designation, rather than a business, and are not included in the moratorium. But Smith argues that it’s illegal to assign any patient limit, three or otherwise.