San Francisco Examiner - April 9, 2002
Tanya Pampalone Of The Examiner Staff
Dean was in San Francisco on Monday meeting with local officials in an apparent effort to gain support for a planned presidential bid in 2004. He met with Leno before accepting the certificate for his political work from the Board of Supervisors.
In the private meeting, Leno -- an openly gay man who authored the Department of Public Health's medical marijuana ID program -- urged the governor to support Vermont's medical marijuana legislation.
Dean has been an outspoken critic of the legislation in his state. The bill, which recently passed Vermont's house and is now in the state senate, would protect patients who use medicinal marijuana with a doctor's recommendation, a law similar to California's Proposition 215.
Because of the severe impact of AIDS on the gay community, many gay and lesbian groups have been strong supporters of medicinal marijuana, which reportedly alleviates nausea and stimulates the appetite of those seriously ill and using AIDS drugs.
Critics light into Dean
"You can't call yourself a friend of (the gay) community and be against medical marijuana," said Bruce Mirken, spokesman for the Washington, D.C.-based Marijuana Policy Project .
"If somebody needs it, they shouldn't go to jail. That should not be a difficult issue."
Dean, who is a medical doctor, said he hasn't seen empirical evidence to support legalization for medical use of marijuana. He maintained that until the FDA has evaluated the drug, he doesn't think his state should pass the bill. He also said he doesn't see the connection with medical marijuana and gay rights.
"If (the medicinal marijuana bill) passes, it will apply to everybody," Dean said. "I can see the link with AIDS, with glaucoma, with cancer, but I don't see the specific link with gay and lesbian issues."
Leno draws the line
Though Leno has witnessed medicinal marijuana's benefits for friends sick with HIV and AIDS, including his deceased partner, he acknowledges that gay rights and medical marijuana are separate.
"The civil union bill is a matter of civil rights," he said, lauding Dean for his civil union support and other political stances. "Medical cannabis is a health issue."
But Mirken has trouble separating the two.
"I have many friends who would be dead today if they had done everything by the book, or if their doctor had done everything by the book," Mirken said.
"When you are dealing with AIDS and cancer, you have to push the envelope."
E-mail Tanya Pampalone at tpampalone@sfexaminer.com
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