ASA Activist Newsletter
In the February 2020 Issue:
- CBD Regulation Bill Introduced in House
- No CBD for Service Members
- House Hearing Held on Six Cannabis Bills
- Medical Cannabis Initiatives Qualify in Mississippi and South
Dakota
- Agenda Announced for Unity 2020
- PFC at Natural Products ExpoWest, March 3.
- Activist Profile: Connor Sheffield, Maryland
- Action Alert: Join ASA for Lobby Day…Even from Home
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CBD Regulation Bill Introduced in House
With the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) dragging its feet on issuing rules for hemp-extract production,
a bipartisan group of three Democrats and three Republicans are
cosponsoring a bill that would regulate cannabidiol(CBD) as a dietary
supplement. Currently, the only CBD product that can be legally
marketed is the pharmaceutical drug EpidiolexTM, which has
been approved only for use with children who have rare seizure
disorders. The FDA has sent letters to several retailers of CBD
products, telling them to stop making health-related claims.
The 2018 Farm Bill cleared the way for a national, interstate
market in hemp and hemp-derived products, and the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) has approved several hemp cultivation programs.
Last month, the USDA approved Texas, Nebraska and Delaware, as well as
four tribes: the Yurok Tribe, Colorado River Indian Tribes, the Fort
Belknap Indian Community, and the Iowa Tribe of Kansas and Nebraska.
Louisiana, New Jersey, and Ohio have previously received USDA approval
for hemp cultivation, as have the Flandreau Santee Sioux, Santa Rosa
Cahuilla, and La Jolla Band of Luiseno Indian Tribes.
Farmers who want to legally grow hemp must do so in a USDA-approved
jurisdiction or apply for a USDA license directly. The USDA website indicates
that 16 state and 10 tribal plans are currently under review. Many
other states and tribes are drafting plans, and three states are
operating under the 2014 Farm Bill’s pilot program.
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No CBD for Service Members
Members of the U.S. armed services still can’t use CBD without
risking career-ending consequences. Officials from the U.S.
Air Force and Military Health System reiterated last month that
military policy forbids it.
While the 2018 Farm Bill made hemp and its extracts legal in the
U.S., Department of Defense maintains a “zero-tolerance” policy on all
cannabis products, including CBD. Each branch of the armed services
has issued separate guidance on hemp products.
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House Hearing Held on Six Cannabis Bills
On January 15, Congress held hearings on
six pending cannabis bills in a key House subcommittee. The Energy
and Commerce Subcommittee on Health called federal agency
officials to testify on “Cannabis Policies for the New Decade” as the
committee considers the Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and
Expungement (MORE) Act, the Marijuana Freedom and Opportunity Act, the
Medical Cannabis Research Act of 2019, the Medical Marijuana Research
Act of 2019, the Legitimate Use of Medicinal Marijuana Act and the
Veterans Medical Marijuana Safe Harbor Act.
Medical research on cannabis was the focus of the hearing, with
officials from the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) and National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
identifying bureaucratic barriers to more studies. The officials all
acknowledged the problems with the supply and types of cannabis
researchers are required to use in clinical studies, all of which must
be obtained from the NIDA farm at University of Mississippi.
The DEA said it is working on regulations for licensing more
research cultivation sites. Numerous applications for research
cultivation licenses have been pending for some time. The director of
NIDA and the representative from the FDA both conceded that
descheduling cannabis would enable more research.
Four Republican members of the House -- Reps. Greg
Walden (R, OR-2), Michael Burgess (R, TX-26), Morgan Griffith (R,
VA-9) and Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R, WA-5) -- requested
the hearings in December in a
letter citing barriers to research on therapeutic applications of
cannabis.
More information:
Committee Hearing Page: https://energycommerce.house.gov/committee-activity/hearings/hearing-on-cannabis-policies-for-the-new-decade
Letter
requesting the hearing: https://republicans-energycommerce.house.gov/news/letter/letter-requesting-hearing-to-review-legislative-initiatives-aimed-at-improving-federally-sanctioned-cannabis-research/
Video
of the hearing: https://youtu.be/1-DaR4QEDN8
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Medical Cannabis Initiatives Qualify in Mississippi and South
Dakota
Voters in Mississippi and South Dakota will have medical cannabis
initiatives on their ballots in November.
The Mississippi
Secretary of State’s office announced last month that it had certified
the petition signatures for Ballot
Initiative 65, which would amend the state’s constitution to allow
qualified patients to use medical cannabis and to designate a
caregiver to assist them.
To qualify for the ballot, the state requires signatures from at
least 86,000 registered voters. In September, Mississippians
for Compassionate Care submitted more than 105,000 signatures. The
group says polling shows 77% of voters in the state support medical
access.
If enacted, physicians would be allowed to certify patients for a
broad range of conditions, including pain, nausea, PTSD, multiple
sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease, ALS, and sickle-cell anemia. The state
department of health would be responsible for developing rules for the
operation of licensed dispensaries, but the initiative specifies a
purchase limit of no more than 2.5 ounces in a two-week period.
The initiative is opposed by Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant (R)
and the state Board of Health.
In South Dakota, the
secretary of state’s office certified that activists there had turned
in petitions with enough valid signatures to make the November ballot
as Initiated
Measure 26. The medical cannabis initiative there is a statutory
amendment, which requires just under 17,000 signatures. Activists with
New
Approach South Dakota submitted more than 30,000.
If approved by voters, the medical cannabis program would allow
home cultivation for qualified patients and caregivers of three
plants, or more if certified by a physician. Enrolled patients would
also be able to obtain up to three ounces of cannabis from licensed
dispensaries. The initiative is likely to face opposition from
Republican lawmakers in the state. The state Republican party
campaigned on social media against the petition effort, and South
Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R) has already vetoed a hemp legalization
bill.
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Agenda Announced for Unity 2020
Americans for Safe Access has
announced the
agenda for the 2020 National Medical Cannabis Unity Conference and
Lobby Day, to be held in Washington, D.C. March 25-28. The
conference theme is "Campaigning
for Cannabis: Making Policies Work for Patients."
On Wednesday, March 25, there will be a welcome reception in the
evening following afternoon workshops. The pre-conference workshops
are open to everyone, free to Unity registrants and a small fee for
those that are not attending Unity. This year, there will be workshops
focused on veteran issues and one focused on competitive athletes.
There will also be a cooking workshop, a training on
advocacy and one on chapter building.
Thursday, March 26 is Lobby Day, which will include a training on
citizen lobbying in the morning before participants travel to capitol
hill for a press conference and meetings with elected representatives
and staffers. ASA will schedule lobby meetings for all registered
participants, and activists who are unable to attend in person will
have the opportunity to take action online.
Informative panels and networking opportunities fill the day for
Friday, March 27. Panels will consider the impact on patients of
transitions between regulatory approaches, the effects of
international developments on U.S. policy, and the importance of
research for product safety. Following that, attendees will break out
into stakeholder groups for discussion and networking. The day wraps
up with a VIP reception and awards dinner, where ASA will recognize
outstanding contributions to safe access.
On the last day of the conference, Saturday, March 28, ASA will
offer a Cannabis Care Certification training and a compliance training
specific to operating in the District of Columbia.
Unity 2020 is made possible by support from sponsors such as
Eaze, CannaSafe, Vireo Health, Stillwater Labs, International Cannabis
and Cannabinoids Institute, Dioscorides, Cannabis Science Conference,
and You Gro Gurl. Companies interested in sponsorship opportunities
can contact [email protected].
https://www.asaunity.org/agenda
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PFC at Natural Products ExpoWest, March 3
On March 3, ASA will be presenting on a panel at the 2020 Natural
Products ExpoWest conference. Heather Despres, director of ASA’s
Patient Focused Certification program, will be on a panel that is part
of a day-long summit on hemp and CBD. ExpoWest is being held in
Anaheim, California, from March 3 to 7.
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Activist Profile: Connor Sheffield, Maryland
Connor
Sheffield will be on the start line opening day at the Airport
Speedway in Delaware on April 4. At 15, Connor isn’t old enough to
have a driver’s license, but he finished seventh overall in the local
micro-sprint kart race series. “Without racing, who would I be?”
Connor wrote at the end of 2019.
Without medical cannabis, likely not
even alive.
Afflicted from a very young age by digestive and eating problems,
Connor was finally diagnosed at age 11 with pediatric
gastro-intestinal dysmotility, a rare autoimmune disorder that had him
in and out of hospitals for much of his young life. Connor’s slow GI
system results in pseudo-obstructions of his bowels and other painful,
life-threatening problems.
In 2018, after years on a feeding tube, he spent a month in the
hospital where he was fed through his veins for 20 days. His doctors
at Johns Hopkins had given up hope and suggested to his family that
there was nothing left to try. It was time for palliative care.
That’s when a family friend urged the Sheffields to consider
cannabis. They’d exhausted their options, including many types of
alternative medicine, but they remained deeply skeptical of
cannabis.
“We didn’t think it would work,” Connor says. On December 27, 2018,
they tried it anyway, administering a medicinal cannabis tincture
containing 15mg of THC.
“Within 20 minutes, I felt better,” Connor says. “No pain, no
nausea, and I had an appetite.”
Over the next month, Connor’s parents continued the cannabis
treatment and carefully monitored and recorded his daily progress,
documenting weight gains from the mere 76 pounds he’d dropped to
during his month in the hospital. But they kept it secret from
everyone out of fear of arrest or loss of custody to Child Protective
Services.
When on their next visit his doctor said “Wow, Connor, you look
amazing,” and began to pat himself on the back for Connor’s recovery,
his mother, Tricia, knew it was time to tell him what had actually
made the difference.
“His doctor was like, ‘Really?!’” Trica recalls. “He said he
couldn’t sign off on it, but keep doing what you’re doing.”
Where the family got the most resistance was from Connor’s
psychologist, who tried to talk them out of using cannabis to treat
him.
“She was concerned about how it might affect his developing brain,
but she’s a believer now.”
She was not the only to be persuaded by Connor’s experience. The
dramatic improvements were undeniable to everyone who had been
following his journey, of which there were many.
After missing on average 150 out of 180 days of school over the
previous five years, in 2019, Connor was able to return to school full
time. In this, his sophomore year in high school, he’s only missed 12.
What makes that possible is the regimen of cannabis tincture, which he
needs every four hours in microdoses.
Unfortunately, Maryland prohibits cannabis on school grounds for
any reason, so he can’t go to the school nurse’s office to take his
medicine the way he could if he had been prescribed steroids, Ritalin,
or even an opioid narcotic. A parent has to come to school, sign him
out, and take him completely off school grounds to give him the
medicine that’s not just keeping him alive but helping him thrive.
That’s possible some days, but there are others when his parents have
to travel for work, and Connor has to skip his medicine.
Connor’s family is not alone in confronting this grave dilemma.
Maryland currently has nearly 200 school-age children enrolled in its
medical cannabis program, but none of them can take their medicine at
school.
On January 20, 2020, a bill to fix that was introduced in the
Maryland House of Delegates. If enacted, HB
331 and companion Senate Bill 0605, also known as Connor’s
Courage, would remove that barrier for the state’s sick
children.
When interviewed for this article, Connor
was again at the Maryland statehouse, lobbying for the bills.
“I’m a living example that this works,” Connor says. “If I want to
see this passed, they have to see me. I have to express the
issue.”
Connor notes that there are currently only 11 states that allow
school children to use the medicinal cannabis they’re legally entitled
to on school grounds. Neighboring Washington, D.C. just added the
provision, as has Virginia. The Sheffields are hopeful Maryland will
join them this year.
“Being a public advocate is a little stressful,” Connor admits, but
says that once people know the facts, “nobody is really going to
oppose it.”
As many other patients also report, Connor says his microdoses of
cannabis do not leave him feeling high, just out of pain. Tricia says
cannabis has transformed her son’s life, not just helping him eat and
digest food but allowing him to grow more confident and social. And in
the last year using cannabis, he’s grown a foot in height. Connor
finally had his feeding tube removed last month, and is excited
to get back to racing.
“He’s well,” says Tricia. “He’s not sick anymore.”
More information:
https://connorscourage.weebly.com
https://legiscan.com/MD/bill/HB331/2020
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Action Alert: Join ASA for Lobby Day…from Home
With the presidential election in full swing, advocates at ASA’s 2020
National Medical Cannabis Unity Conference and lobby day have a
chance to push or elected officials to improve and expand safe access.
If you can make it to Washington D.C. in March to experience
ASA conference and lobby day, you'll meet other advocates, learn
together and meet with your lawmakers and staff.
If you can’t make it to D.C., you can still participate by lobbying
from home. ASA will coordinate your efforts by email and on the phone
so we can expand our impact even further.
Just RSVP to receive notification on March 26 about how to work
with us in contacting your elected officials. RSVP today at safeaccessnow.org/lobby20.
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