Medical Marijuana Laws Taking Root Across The South

Jacob Redmond

Well-Known Member
Chester, S.C. - She lives in the wooden house her grandfather built more than a century ago in Chester, South Carolina, a rural community about a two-hour drive southeast of the Blue Ridge Mountains.

The cluttered home is dimly lit and not air-conditioned, with the low hum of floor fans filling in rare lulls in conversation. Two Chihuahuas, Cricket and Joe, scuttle around Ada Jones' feet as she peers down through her eyeglasses at the iPad in her hands.

The tablet looks conspicuously out of place among the black-and-white photos hanging on the walls and the dangling, beaded divider into the next room. It serves as her connection to the outside world, as well as the outside world's connection to Jones.

If someone needs medical marijuana, they contact her over the Internet.

Jones encourages those who reach out to her to purchase marijuana illegally and make their own cannabis oil. If they're unsuccessful, she puts them in contact with a supplier who can sell them a more refined product.

"It's almost like playing God," Jones said. "If somebody contacts me, I have to look at them and wonder. I wonder if that's police first, not if I can help their kid. I try not to do that, but you have to because you're scared."

Jones helps everyone she can, whether they be young mothers of epileptic children or older patients suffering from chronic pain. Her specific brand of civil disobedience, like so many other facets of Southern life, is captained by her faith.

"They talk about the South being the Bible belt, and praise the Lord we are," Jones said. "I cannot not help somebody. I have to. As a Christian, that's what I'm here for."

Many Southern states have a long and failed history with medical marijuana, mired deep in forgotten statutes. Only recently, as the marijuana movement sweeps through statehouses, have those laws become political tinder for a new debate in the South.

Baton Rouge, La. - In 1976, as Ada Jones was graduating from Chester High School in South Carolina, Tony Guarisco - who would become an iconic advocate for medical marijuana in Louisiana - joined the state Legislature.

Just two years after his election, Guarisco proposed a bill that wrought controversy statewide - from Baton Rouge's towering, Art Deco Capitol building to Guarisco's small, shrimping hometown of Morgan City.

He wanted to legalize medical marijuana through a therapeutic research program. "Some people said I was ahead of my time about a lot of things," Guarisco said. "I wasn't afraid of it."

Between 1978 and 1982, 25 states set up similar medical marijuana research programs, designed mainly to treat cancer and glaucoma patients. To receive the marijuana, states were supposed to contract with the National Institute on Drug Abuse, which cultivated cannabis at a federally funded farm at the University of Mississippi.

Louisiana became the third to pass legislation in July 1978. Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina quickly followed, signing laws in a seven-month span between 1979 and 1980.

"I knew we were pioneers in it," Guarisco said.

At Senate committee meetings, Guarisco offered up testimony from afflicted patients and family members. At one hearing, he was approached by a sheriff, who warned Guarisco that the freshman senator's first term would be his last. It wasn't.

Gov. Edwin Edwards would sign his medical marijuana bill that summer, and Guarisco would go on to serve in the Louisiana Senate for two more terms.

Like most other state programs at the time, Guarisco's bill provided for the establishment of a state medical board to certify participating patients, physicians and pharmacies. Only chemotherapy and glaucoma patients were eligible for treatment.

He thought his work was finished.

"I mean, I'm in there two years. I thought when you passed something, the people that needed to take action after that, to make it operative, would do what they needed to do," Guarisco said. "Unfortunately, they never did."

In the nearly four decades since its signing, Louisiana's medical marijuana research program has treated not a single patient.

Similar programs around the country also slowly evaporated. Either they were never approved by the necessary federal agencies or their funds were never appropriated by legislatures. Some state medical boards were simply not established.

Today, not many know the programs ever existed.

"It's an anomaly," Guarisco said. "How did that happen in Louisiana – a Southern state all the way at the bottom – 37 years ago?"

This lost generation of medical marijuana patients is now giving way to children taking a less-psychoactive version of the drug. In the past two years, the faces of young children suffering from debilitating, seizure-related disorders have come to characterize medical marijuana in the American South.

The bygone laws are now resurfacing, and old statutes are being rewritten as lawmakers try to understand what happened to the ineffective programs of decades ago. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal in June signed a bill that allows for the dispensing of medical marijuana to qualified patients in Lousiana, though it could take years to establish a state system.

Beaufort, S.C. - South Carolina state Sen. Tom Davis first heard the name Mary Louise Swing in late January of last year.

The opening month of the 2014 legislative session was just wrapping up, and the legislator was back from the capital city of Columbia to do some work at his law office in Beaufort, a scenic coastal city located on Port Royal Island.

Davis chatted briefly that Monday afternoon with a law partner who had just met a woman named Harriet Hilton at a local Rotary club lunch. Her granddaughter suffered from a severe form of epilepsy and was seeking a type of treatment not currently legal or particularly popular in the Palmetto State – medical marijuana.

"Quite frankly, it wasn't even on my radar screen," Davis said. "It wasn't anything in terms of public policy that I thought about doing until I heard about that story."

About a week later, Hilton was sitting across from Davis in his Beaufort office, discussing her granddaughter, Mary Louise, now 7.

With the help of senate staffers, Davis rifled through old statutes to clarify the current legality of marijuana in the historically conservative state. What they unearthed was an obscure, obsolete law that would come to play a greater role in 2014 than it ever did following its passage 35 years ago.

"The South Carolina Controlled Substances Therapeutic Research Act of 1980" was designed to treat cancer and glaucoma patients with marijuana. It authorized the state health department to establish a board to certify participating patients and practitioners.

However, South Carolina's act met the same fate as other states' programs. It treated few, if any, patients.

"There was probably some social pushback. Probably some individuals who didn't realize what had gone on in Columbia, and then once they found out about the 1980 law, called up their lawmakers and objected," Davis said.

Even though the law failed to treat patients in the '80s, Davis saw the act as a vehicle to help his current constituents.

"In legislative process, it's always good to try to amend existing law as opposed to passing new law. Taking that 1980 law as a jumping-off point and amending it really got us halfway there," Davis said. "It was a good icebreaker."

Davis said he met Mary Louise's mother, Jill Swing, at the bill's first subcommittee hearing. Jill and Mary Louise were set to relocate to Colorado to legally obtain medical marijuana, leaving Mary Louise's father and brother behind in Charleston.

"He heard Mary Louise's story and reached out to her (Hilton) and said 'Wait, don't move yet,'" Swing said of Davis. "'We need a story. We need a family. We need a way to personalize the legislation and the incredible need for this type of legislation in our state.'"

Republican Gov. Nikki Haley signed Davis' bill into law in June 2014, legalizing CBD oil for epilepsy patients in South Carolina.

CBD oil is an extract with concentrated amounts of cannabidiol - the part of the cannabis plant anecdotally shown to treat seizures - and low amounts of tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC - marijuana's psychoactive component.

Though the final law allowed physicians to authorize, and patients to consume, CBD oil, it did not provide for its cultivation or dispensation. Parents, patients and advocates have grown increasingly frustrated with the current state of medical marijuana in South Carolina. A law was passed in Alabama last year to allow for limited use of CBD oil, although Alabama patients are running into the same inability to access the medicine and are also facing similar decisions about moving west.

"We've had to go on the black market. We've had to work through a network of other parents," Swing said. "It's just been very challenging not having a really, really concrete law that allows for full medical marijuana in the state."

Chester, S.C. - Even today in states such as Alabama and South Carolina - where CBD oil is legal but there's no provision to grow or distribute the drug - patients are left to obtain medical marijuana on their own, often across state lines and in violation of federal law.

"There is an underground network of parents who had been treating their children for a while in states where they had limited-access bills like we had," said Janel Ralph, a mother in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, whose daughter suffers from a severe seizure disorder. "It was really an underground railroad."

You could call Ada Jones one of its many conductors.

"The Jesus Christ that I know wouldn't want me to let anybody suffer," Jones said. "If it's in my ability to help them, then I'm going to help them."

Perhaps her favorite patient is her best friend, Beverly Love.

A 55-year-old Chester native, Love was diagnosed with lupus at 31, and soon after, multiple sclerosis.

Her doctor told her she probably had a maximum of two years to live. She needed to get her affairs in order and figure out who would be raising her 8-year-old son after she was gone.

"That was a scary thing. Not mainly for me – I worried about my son, my child," Love said. "But I'm still here, surprisingly. Even my doctors are surprised that I'm still living."

Before Love met Jones, she didn't know what the word cannabis meant and had never smoked marijuana. She considered those who did drug addicts.

"She could run for president and you couldn't find nothing on her. The girl is squeaky clean," Jones said. "She didn't want to do this. But she didn't want to die."

Jones inundated Love with countless articles on marijuana's medical benefits and personal testimonies to its effectiveness.

"She just kept on," Love remembers. "And I'm thankful that she did. I'm really thankful that she did."

Love first experimented with medical cannabis about a year and a half ago, spreading some medicated jam Jones had acquired for her on a piece of bread just before bedtime. Within two hours, Love said she experienced a relief she hadn't known in years.

She does not suffer from epilepsy, the only qualifying condition eligible to possess CBD oil in South Carolina. Even if she did, the oil she takes now is whole-plant – meaning it contains naturally high levels of THC in relation to CBD.

She knows she could be arrested, but for her, the risk is worth it.

"If I started getting locked up now, I would move to a state where it was legal, because it's made such a difference in my day-to-day living," Love said. "I actually have quality of life now. And I didn't."

Atlanta, Ga. - Just a week before Georgia state Rep. Allen Peake received an email from Janea Cox - a mother whose daughter suffered from intractable epilepsy - he told a Macon journalist there would be no interest in a medical marijuana bill during the 2014 legislative session.

"Absolutely no way," Peake remembers saying. "I'm never going to touch that."

Days later, he visited Eggleston Hospital's intensive-care unit and stood over 4-year-old Haleigh Cox, on her deathbed.

Over the next 15 months, Peake would become the legislative champion of medical marijuana in Georgia, spearheading a comprehensive CBD oil law complete with eight qualifying conditions and a 5 percent THC cap – much higher than most states that have recently passed CBD legislation.

Peake's victory was just one episode in a trend of Republican lawmakers suddenly taking up the mantle for medical marijuana in the South.

"We're committed to family values," Peake said. "Here we were, because of our own laws, splitting up families."

Peake remembers many of his conservative colleagues telling him he'd gone off the deep end when he first proposed a medical marijuana bill in 2014. They said it would be the end of his time at the Capitol.

But he picked up steam with testimony from torn families like the Coxes, who were forced to leave the state in search of medication they couldn't obtain or even legally possess in Georgia. They just wanted to help their children.

Sue Rusche has children, too. She has been fighting against the spread of marijuana in Georgia before the state first passed its research program in 1980 with the help of lobbyists from the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.

She characterized the pro-legalization group's intentions as sinister – preying on lawmakers' emotions during debate over both the 1980 therapeutic use program and Peake's 2015 CBD oil law.

"NORML was not against exploiting desperately ill people and bringing them in as witnesses to swear that they needed marijuana to survive," Rusche said. "That brought forth the attraction in the same way that children with epilepsy are tugging at people's heartstrings"

Peake knows of no patients ever treated by Georgia's 1980 Controlled Substances Therapeutic Research Act, and attributes its demise to a lack of interest. He scrapped the law entirely with his bill.

"It's basically voiding the 1980 legislation and saying, 'Here's the new medical cannabis legislation that is in existence in Georgia at this time,'" Peake said.

In the state's revised statute, the words "Controlled Substances Therapeutic Research Act" are stricken through with a bold line.

Its title now represents a new generation - "Haleigh's Hope Act."

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Full Article: Medical marijuana laws taking root across the South | AL.com
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