Showing posts with label FL Senate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FL Senate. Show all posts

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Cutting Through the Fog (Prelude)

It is a beautiful, foggy Florida morning. Driving across from the east to the west coast, it almost seems as if the fog is lifting with the morning sun immediately ahead of my headlights. Doesn't seem so foggy where I am, but just up ahead, it seems like pea soup.

We are seeking to inform veterans -- many of whom we strongly believe could benefit from the use of marijuana for a variety of ailments, including post traumatic stress, cancer, and other neurological disorders -- that cannabis is being legally and effectively used by veterans in other states.

The policy of the Veterans Administration on cannabis, while good for veterans in legal states, is one of exclusion. As my friend Al Byrne puts it, VA is practicing treatment by geography. They allow the use of cannabis in courses of treatment in 20 states, but it is disallowed and grounds for removal of pain medication in the other 30 states where it is not legal to consume cannabis, an inhumane policy when you consider that the purpose of using cannabis in many of these cases is to reduce the amount of debilitating medication they need to effectively manage their pain.

Today is day three of the tour, and I join the gang at the Bay Pines VA Medical Center. Our goal this week is to get information in the hands of veterans. There will be legislation and ballot initiatives to consider this year in Florida, and we need to make sure that our veterans and our Veterans Administrations are prepared for it. 

Most importantly, everyone involved needs to understand how urgent the matter is. We cannot wait for the FDA. We cannot wait for the DEA. We cannot wait for the NIDA. We can barely even wait for the Florida Legislature to act. Allowing the charade of Reefer Madness to continue hurts our veterans in ways we have only begun to calculate.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

HB 1139 and SB 1250, The Cathy Jordan Medical Cannabis Act

Status of the Bills

HB 1139

Introduced and Referred to Committees:
·         Health Quality Subcommittee
·         Business & Professional Regulation Subcommittee
·         Appropriations Committee
·         Health & Human Services Committee

SB 1250

Introduced and Referred to Committees:
·         Committees: Health Policy (HP)
·         Judiciary (JU)
·         Criminal Justice (CJ)
·         Appropriations (AP)

What YOU CAN Do

·         Help the bill get a fair hearing in its committees. Call the leadership of both chambers and the committees to which the bills are currently assigned.
·         Call the chairman of the Health Policy Senate Committee:
Senator Aaron Bean, (850) 487-5004.
·         Call Representative Ken Roberson’s office, chairman of the Health Quality House Subcommittee: (850) 717-5075
·         Have the bill pushed through committee or heard in the General Assembly
·         Contact the Senate President Don Gaetz and tell him why we need this bill: (850) 487-5001
·         Contact the Speaker of the House Will Weatherford and tell him why this bill should be heard on the floor of the house: (850) 717-5038.
·         Sign on for Actoin Alerts at http://www.flcan.org.

What CAN Happen

Authorizing a qualifying patient to possess and administer medical cannabis, and possess and use paraphernalia for a specified purpose, etc. as of this year, if the bill passes. If the bill gets a hearing this year, then we can expect it to go much farther next year, with an even greater chance of passing..

Bipartisan Support

Medical cannabis has the support of all parties because anyone has the potential to need this medicine, and nearly everyone knows someone who could benefit or who could have benefited from this medicine.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Onerous and Daunting

Funny how after you’ve done this long enough, any crack in the wall seems like a major breakthrough. Many years ago, Rob Kampia made it very clear that MPP would never spend a penny to make cannabis legal in Florida. Rob said Florida was onerous. He wasn’t entirely wrong. Those who know Florida politics understand that we have 11 distinct media markets, and what plays in Boca has no business in Apalachicola.

This week, our work in Tallahassee was really successful. More and more the decision makers know it isn’t a question of “if” medical cannabis will happen, but “when.”

Florida Cannabis Action Network went out on a limb this session and rented a furnished apartment in Tallahassee. The apartment more than pays for itself; but only if we keep bringing in advocates from around the state to talk to their lawmakers and peers. This week John from Palm Harbor joined us.

John is closer to 80 than 70, but he made the four plus hour trip to Tallahassee alone. He tried to bring two different patients with him. One was hospitalized in the days prior to the trip. The second, fear kept him at home, fear of coming out of the closet, fear of being persecuted – just fear.

But John came, because he knows how hard it is for sick people to make the trip. At nearly 80 years old he has realized someone must speak for these patients who have so much to lose by exposing themselves.

Last week, a staffer looked at our bill and said, “Wow, this is daunting.”

Daunting? I think to myself, that is better than onerous, so I’m having a “You’ve come a long way, baby” moment.

But at the end of the day, this perfectly healthy person who we pay to do big things has a lot of nerve calling doing her job daunting. Daunting, daunting. What do you call an 80 year old man driving all the way to Tallahassee to speak for those who can not speak for themselves? What do you call get out of bed every day knowing that your future means never a pain free day? What do you call looking down the barrel of a gun to defend your country, then coming home missing a piece of your body or soul?


Florida CAN has been asking people to do what they can to make cannabis reform happen, we provide you with tools, but it is up to you to make this thing happen. Lawmakers may think this is daunting, but creating sensible policies is their job. If your life without cannabis might be considered challenging, or daunting, maybe even onerous, please, call your representatives office, tell them your story and stand next to your friend when they make the call. Together, we can make light work of a onerous, but worthwhile, task.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Cathy and Bob Jordan work on Florida Cannabis Bills HB 1139 and SB 1250

Join Cathy and Bob Jordan as they travel to the Capitol to encourage support for HB 1139 and SB 1250. This is actually the fourth day of session.


Wednesday, February 1, 2012

One Mind at a Time

Days in Tallahassee 15
Remaining committees 7
Remaining Days for bills to be heard 28
Remaining days of funding 15


The atmosphere in Tallahassee changed this week. The Speaker of the House released his budget appropriations and now the wheeling and dealing starts. It’s also harder to get appointments and the sub-committee meetings are coming to a close.

We created a statewide day of action today. While hundreds of people made phone calls today, I escorted Amy from Jacksonville around the Capital. We were popping in on the Jacksonville delegation in addition to the regular appointments I had scheduled.

Tallahassee has circles within circles and delegations are one of those circles. The Jacksonville delegation is made up of everyone whose district touches Duval County and will include other representatives from neighboring counties who share an economic interest. While it’s getting harder and harder for Representatives to make time for me, constituents may get a minute or two. At the very least, the Aide is happy to take your information and tell the Representative you stopped by.

Meeting with aides may not be our first choice, but knowing the aides, being on good terms and sharing your story with them is always a good idea. Representatives are term-limited, their aides aren’t. Many of the aides have worked in Tallahassee for years, they move from office to office. They understand how to make things happen and have their finger on the pulse of the building. Several aides have confessed to knowing someone who benefited greatly from cannabis. Several have confessed to burning a few themselves.

We arrived early for our last appointment of the day. With aching feet it was good to find a spot to sit awhile. A companion joined us in a lounge setting near the Representatives office. He struck up a conversation, first mentioning he’d seen me around the building. We chatted casually about long days away from home, over-achieving children, just small talk. His briefcase proudly displayed the Florida Chief of Police Association.

After a few minutes of socializing, I ask if he is still with the Association. After he proudly introduces himself, I tell him the Association is on my list of appointments this week. He asks my business – once I tell him – we had the usual reply. Hands out, pushing back, whooooo, not sure that we’re on the same side on that one. Twenty minutes later, when we were told the Representative wasn’t going to make it back for our meeting, we didn’t care.

Our new friend was a former drug cop and big agency guy working narcotics going back to the 70’s in South Florida. He is currently consulting with a Michigan police department that isn’t liking the medical cannabis dispensaries in their towns at all. I explained that is why we want police on board now, to help create a system that works for everyone.

Police know cannabis isn’t going away. We pushed through the gateway theory, he couldn’t argue with sugar being the first drug we use to abuse! We had an affable conversation. In the end it always comes down to medical cannabis being the first step and us wanting more.

I explained that once you started to look at this you realize without this medicine some people are going to die. We think those people need to be taken care of first, but who can look at the young people incarcerated and the time wasted on cannabis investigations without being moved to object. The right answer is regulating and controlling it. So, I asked, since that is what we want, a regulated and controlled system, where is the compromise? His answer, “A good medical cannabis access program.” Yeah, that’s what we thought too. See we can come together on this issue.

He started the conversation because I was familiar to him. He kept having the conversation because we were sincere, polite, thoughtful, non-accusatory and kind. In the end he called our mission God’s work. One day at a time, one mind at a time, we are winning this was just as surely as the Berlin Wall was destined to fall.

Our call in program went really well today. Hundreds of calls were reported.

The big issue of the day at the Capital is the removal of Senator Frasano as the Chair of the Criminal Justice committee. The leadership, the Governor and President of the Senate want to sell our prisoners to private prison companies, (the same jokers who spent tens of thousands on campaign contribution to leadership during the last election). Frasano was asking tough questions and standing up against selling our prisoners to the highest bidder. In the middle of a committee hearing the President of the Senate interrupted the meeting, fired the Chair and appointed a new chair person.

If we want to move medical cannabis in Florida through legislators who act like that when they are challenged, we have to be loud and proud.

Monday, January 23, 2012

Are we having fun yet?

Day 10
Remaining Committees – 7
Remaining Days to be heard 37
Remaining funding – 20 days

The experience here in Tallahassee is hard to beat if you like this sort of thing. One of our board members asked me last week if I was having fun. Hhmmm, if you like working 15 hours a day with a couple breaks for meals and sleeping in a hotel, then yes. If you think talking to decision makers about creating policy is cool; then, we are definitely having fun.

I mentioned earlier that session is sixty days. The countdown doesn’t pause for weekends, so it is quite disturbing to me lawmakers work a 3-4 day work week. The House of Representatives didn’t even meet today; the Senate in its defense handled some big stuff today. Privatization of prisons in Florida was a major area of debate today.

Two thoughts come to mind as I contemplate the 3-4 day work week are lawmakers are enjoying as the days of session count down.

First, I used today to make appointments to meet with the lawmakers on our committee schedule. Yesterday, I diligently researched 19 lawmakers, standing ready to make appointments today for the remainder of the week. Imagine my surprise when I was told in some offices, the member has no more appointments available through the end of session. We are forty-six days to the end of session and of those days lawmakers will only work in Tallahassee 29 based on what we have seen. No wonder they don’t have time to meet with constituents.

And then there is the idea the Senate handled important business today. The House members didn’t even come back until today. If people are use to the House and Senate not doing business on Friday’s and Monday’s is this a way to reduce civic participation?

Since today was quite at the Capital, I spent the day building strategies with People United of Medical Marijuana, Robert Platshorn and his Silver Tour, SSDP and the Committee for Sensible Marijuana Policy. We are calling all supporters together to push the legislators to educate themselves about this plant.