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UNCONSTITUTIONAL REGULATIONS
An American seeking refugee status in Canada was granted a medical exemption last week
to grow and use marijuana for medical purposes by Health Canada.
But Canadian citizen Brian Carlisle, a Chilliwack resident, has so far been denied a
similar exemption, despite being in a higher patient category and despite filing his
application earlier.
"If we don’t get it today, that’s it," Mr. Carlisle says. "We go to court Tuesday and
ask to get the regulations thrown out."
"Obviously those regulations aren’t working if a category one person can get approved in
three to four weeks," he adds.
U.S. Pot activist Steve Kubby was issued an exemption by Health Canada for a category
3 illness - chronic and long-term on Thursday. Mr. Carlisle’s application is for category
one terminal patients with 12 months to live. Applications for both categories require
doctors’ approvals.
"Almost three weeks have passed and Mr. Carlisle’s condition is deteriorating rapidly,"
Defence Lawyer Dale Pedersen says in a letter to the Office of Cannabis Medical
Access. "In my opinion, in light of the urgency, the delay ... is simply unacceptable."
Dale Pedersen says he will ask the B.C. Supreme Court to strike down the regulations for
medical marijuana as unconstitutional.
The exemption granted Mr. Kubby allows him to grow 59 marijuana plants, possess and travel
with 360 grams, and store 2,655 grams. The exemption lasts for one year.
Mr. Kubby’s wife, Michele Kubby, says the Health Canada program "still has too many hoops for sick people
to jump through" but should serve as a model to U.S. lawmakers.
Published in the Chilliwack Progress September 3, 2002
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