Tyrannical Drug Treatment Programs
Tue, Feb 23, 2010 4:14 pm
New Jersey NORML
Tom A. called me today. He was very upset that he was about to lose his job due to his medical marijuana use.
Tom said that he uses marijuana to treat his depression and anxiety. He was arrested in New York City five months ago for smoking marijuana. The marijuana charge was dismissed—after all, marijuana use was decriminalized in New York, and this was his first offense. But the New York police contacted his employer. Tom is a blacksmith at the Belmont Racetrack in New York, and as such he must be licensed by the Wagering Board. The Wagering Board suspended Tom’s license due to his arrest and insisted that Tom complete a drug treatment program.
Tom enrolled in a drug treatment program in Long Island. He went for 13 weeks and had to pay $75 a week out of his own pocket. After the 12th week, the drug treatment program told him that he would have to attend an additional 13 weeks. They did not tell him why. Angry and frustrated, Tom went home and smoked some marijuana for the first time in months. The next week, the drug treatment program tested Tom’s urine and Tom tested positive. Now he was told that he had failed the program altogether and the program was going to report that to his employer.
Tom asked me what he could do. Though he works in NY, he lives in Parsippany, New Jersey, and he knows that New Jersey just passed a medical marijuana law. Could I refer him to a doctor who could get him an ID card? No, I explained. The law just passed and it will not be implemented until July 2010. It will be the Department of Health that will issue the ID cards, based on a New Jersey licensed physician’s certification that the patient has a qualifying condition. The New Jersey law is very restrictive. Tom’s medical conditions, depression and anxiety, would not qualify him to use marijuana in New Jersey.
I asked Tom if he was ever treated by a doctor for these conditions. He said no, he had tried tranquilizers and anti-depressants and hated the way they made him feel. A few tokes of marijuana in the evening, though, was all he needed to lift his spirits, ease his anxiety, and make him feel human again. I suggested Tom talk to his physician and tell him that he has been self-medicating for these conditions. There may come a time when New Jersey does recognize that marijuana is a safe and effective alternative for the treatment not only of a few physical conditions, but for a wide variety of mental disorders, as well. In the meantime I suggested that Tom hire a lawyer, who may be able to argue his case before the Wagering Board.
The tyranny of these drug treatment programs is yet one more example of the social injustice that Tom faced. That Tom could arbitrarily, and without explanation, be forced to extend his program for another 13 weeks represents nothing short of greed and cruelty on their part. To force anyone into a substance abuse treatment program for marijuana use is absurd, when you consider that marijuana is less addicting than caffeine. According to a new report issued by the US Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, nearly six out of ten individuals enrolled in drug treatment for marijuana were referred there by the criminal justice system. Treatment statistics published by the federal government this past spring reported that over 37 percent of the estimated 288,000 thousand people who entered drug treatment for marijuana in 2007 had not reported using it in the 30 days previous to their admission.
Substance abuse treatment programs for marijuana use are worse than a rip-off. They can literally destroy lives.













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terry
Mar 10 2010, 7:21 am
mike
Feb 27 2010, 6:54 pm
T
Feb 24 2010, 8:39 pm
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