The SouthTown Star wrote:Springfield legislators weighing dope proposalThe SouthTown StarApril 5, 2009
By Maura Possley, Staff Writer
Diagnosed with cancer at 16, Scott Poplawski turned to marijuana at the urging of his siblings to fight effects of chemotherapy that were ravaging his young body.
He weighed just 86 pounds after eight months of treatment, down from 220.
Marijuana fought off nausea, stomach pain and diarrhea, he said, and it's worked ever since.
He has since lost his bladder and other effects of the chemo linger, but Poplawski is able to maintain a 190-pound frame today.
That's the reason Poplawski, fellow cancer victims and chronic pain sufferers have been lobbying lawmakers on a measure to allow them their medical marijuana.
"Every nerve in my body is waking up, and I am in more pain than I ever was," said fellow advocate Lucie Macfarlane, seated in her Joliet home. "I wake up to pain; I go to bed with pain."
<span class=postbold>Nothing else works anymore</span>
It's been one week since Macfarlane quit taking methadone, just the latest in a long line of prescribed narcotic drugs she has taken the past 12 years for neurofibromatosis, a tumor-causing disease that attacked her spine, leading to surgeries and fusing of vertebrae, and two tumors in her brain.
Macfarlane, a 46-year-old mother of two, prefers to ingest marijuana but currently smokes it to ease her pain.
She's had it with prescription drugs - the Oxycontin, Fentanyl patches, Valium and others.
Her husband, James, often thought she was dead in her sleep because the drugs made Macfarlane ice cold. She said she suffered more than a decade of numbness, weight gain and depression.--
"When you come off it, you realize, 'My God, what have I been doing all these years?' " she said. "Those are 12 wasted years of my life."
The way she sees it, marijuana is her only hope.
The drug allows her to be herself again while battling a disease that won't allow her to see old age.
"I'm not planning to live to be a very old lady," she said. "I would at least like to live the rest of my life not in pain."
This isn't the first time medical marijuana has come across lawmakers' desks.--
Two years ago, it fell short of passage with 22 votes in the state Senate.--
That its sponsor then is now the state Senate president - John Cullerton, a Chicago Democrat - gives advocates hope that the measure will get farther than ever before.
A national advocacy group, the Marijuana Policy Project, has also campaigned heavily here for its passage, mirroring efforts across the country.
<span class=postbold>Bills too loosely written</span>
But these proponents are facing down heavy opposition, among it the weighted voice of Illinois law enforcement.
"If you start saying that marijuana is medicine, then pretty soon the kids will start thinking, 'This is good stuff; there's nothing wrong with it; we can take it like Aspirin," said Laimutis Nargelenas, deputy director for the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police.
Legislation is "so poorly written that we believe they were written by a drug dealer," he said. "It's written so loosely."
Bill sponsors are reacting by tightening provisions in the legislation that regulate who is eligible, including people with cancer, glaucoma, hepatitis C, Crohn's disease and others. Also the bill's drafters are elaborating on how patients would be allowed to obtain the plant, who may write prescriptions for marijuana, and what process state Department of Public Health would use to register users. And finally, they're clarifying that the new law would not conflict with Illinois driving under the influence laws.
The state Senate bill, which has companion legislation in the state House, would allow those with debilitating conditions to possess seven dried cannabis plants and two ounces of dried usable cannabis.
Anyone caught with that amount of marijuana now would face two class 4 felony counts, each of which carries three to six years in prison and a fine up to $25,000.
If passed, the bill would sunset in three years, effectively making it a pilot program.
But law enforcement remains adamant holes in the process would provide more supply for drug dealer demand.
Authorities also say the level of THC - or tetrahydrocannabinol, the chemical produced by the plant - must be regulated. The only way to do that, they say, is to put it behind a pharmacy counter. Patients like Macfarlane would prefer to get their marijuana through a distributing dispensary.
"Let's not have people going out there self-administering to themselves," Nargelenas said. "If you're going to have medical marijuana, then let's treat it like medicine."
<span class=postbold>'We're dying to get this passed'</span>
Macfarlane thinks police officers and politicians concerned about marijuana as a street drug are missing the bigger picture.
She's had a cabinet full of addictive, possibly lethal, painkillers - all legally prescribed by doctors - that are just as likely to be abused by the drug users law enforcement agencies are worried about.
"They're worried about a plant that teenagers can get anyway," Macfarlane said.
Law enforcement officials and drug policy experts say there's a rising tide of prescription drug abuse in America, including among teenagers.
In 2007, 2.1 million people abused or were dependent on psychotherapeutics used non-medically, according to the federal government's Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
And seven of the top 10 drugs abused by teens in 2008 were prescribed or purchased over the counter, a study done by the National Institute on Drug Abuse found.
Despite the alarming trend of prescription drug abuse, experts say when it comes to marijuana legislation, it's hard to miss the line drawn in the sand.
Authorities opposing legal medicinal marijuana use see a host of problems.
"(This) makes it so much easier for people to get their hands on this marijuana and they're not even sure what they're smoking," Nargelenas said.
While those who are ill, like Macfarlane and Poplawski, see responsible use as a way to get pain-free days to enjoy the only life they have.
"We're dying to get this passed," Macfarlane said. "This has to be the year because I don't know how much longer I can take this."
Maura Possley can be reached at
mpossley@southtownstar.com or at (708) 633-5993.
Thirteen states have enacted similar medical marijuana laws:
• Alaska
• California
• Colorado
• Hawaii
• New Mexico
• Maine
• Michigan
• Montana
• Nevada
• Oregon
• Rhode Island
• Washington
• Vermont
Source: Marijuana Policy Project