Ohio legislature votes to allow limited
medical marijuana use
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[May 26, 2016]
By Kim Palmer
CLEVELAND (Reuters) - Lawmakers in Ohio on
Wednesday approved legislation that would legalize marijuana use for
medical purposes under certain circumstances, less than a year after
recreational marijuana use was soundly defeated by Ohio voters.
The bill, approved by both chambers of the state's Republican-led
legislature, heads to Republican Governor John Kasich for his
signature as his office said on Wednesday that he will review the
bill.
During the last few years, state legislatures and voters in the
United States have been much more receptive to making the use of
marijuana legal for medical purposes than for recreational use.
Some 24 states and Washington D.C. currently allow some type of
medical marijuana use while only a handful of states allow for
recreational use. It remains illegal on the federal level.
The Ohio legislation is more limiting than some in that it only
allows patients with specific medical conditions to use an oil,
edible, tincture or vapor form of marijuana prescribed by a
physician licensed in the state, starting in 2017.
"This bill is not perfect, but it’s what Ohio patients need," Ohio
Senator Kenny Yuko, a Democrat, said before his house approved the
bill.
"Marijuana is not a gateway drug, but a gateway off drugs."
Medical marijuana users would not be allowed to smoke or grow their
own marijuana under the measure, which also would create a
commission responsible for regulating and licensing of all
operations of the drug.
In November, Ohio voters soundly rejected a measure that would have
made it the first U.S. Midwestern state to legalize the recreational
use of marijuana.
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A jar of medical marijuana is displayed at the medical marijuana
farmers market at the California Heritage Market in Los Angeles,
California July 11, 2014. REUTERS/David McNew
Lawmakers from both parties voted for and against the bill on
Wednesday. Some opponents of the measure have said that the
qualifying list of medical conditions is too limited.
The measure was fast-tracked to head off a possible less-restrictive
medical marijuana ballot initiative in November.
In a poll released in early May, 90 percent of Ohio voters supported
the legalization for medical marijuana.
(Reporting by Kim Palmer in Cleveland; Editing by Michael Perry)
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