New Hampshire Bill to Allow Personal Medical Marijuana Cultivation Advances in Legislature

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New Hampshire Bill to Allow Personal Medical Marijuana Cultivation Advances in Legislature

New Hampshire’s full Senate this week passed legislation that would allow medical marijuana patients to legally grow their own medicine. A similar bill was vetoed last year by the state’s governor.

The measure must now be passed by the House of Representatives before it can be sent to Governor Chris Sununu (R) for consideration.

“New Hampshire has reasonable regulations set up to ensure that our therapeutic cannabis program responsibly treats those in need while limiting the diversion of marijuana to the black market and ensuring that products meet public health standards,” Sununu said after he vetoed last year’s bill. “This bill would bypass those public health and safety guardrails and make the job of law enforcement significantly more difficult.”

As noted by High Times, the new bill passed this week would permit patients or licensed caregivers to grow up to “three mature cannabis plants” at one time. Tom Sherman, a Democratic state House representative, said the measure would be a game-changer.

“This bill will give patients and their caregivers the ability to grow their own medicine at greatly reduced cost compared to the prohibitive costs that they would have had to pay at a dispensary, which might not even have the type of medical cannabis that patients needs to treat their conditions,” Sherman said, as quoted by New Hampshire Public Radio.


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“New Hampshire legislators have been busy with other marijuana bills in this year’s session” states HT. “Last month, the state House voted to expand New Hampshire’s medical marijuana program to include both insomnia and opioid addiction as qualifying conditions for a medical marijuana prescription.”

The current list of qualifying conditions in New Hampshire includes: ALS, Alzheimer’s disease, cachexia, cancer, chemotherapy-induced anorexia, chronic pain, chronic pancreatitis, Crohn’s disease, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, elevated intraocular pressure, epilepsy, glaucoma, hepatitis C (currently receiving antiviral treatment), HIV and AIDS, lupus, moderate to severe vomiting, multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy, nausea, Parkinson’s disease, persistent muscle spasms, post-traumatic stress disorder, seizures, severe pain that has not responded to previously prescribed medication, spinal cord injury or disease, traumatic brain injury, and wasting syndrome.

 

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