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Yearly Archives: 2010

MADISON: Several national activists who visited Wisconsin in support of the Jacki Rickert Medical Marijuana Act during the 2009-2010 session campaign to pass it will be appearing at a Michigan Medical Cannabis Seminar this July.

Mieko Hester Perez , James Gierach, and Brandy Zink will be joining 420 University’s “Science and Compassionate Care Seminar” in July 10 and 11, 2010 in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Mieko Hester Perez “Marijuana Saved My Son’s Life” and James Gierach Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) both appeared at the Feb. 6 T.H.C. Expo in Berlin and lobbied at the State Capitol the day before. Brandy Zink joined other Michigan medical marijuana advocates in testimony at the Dec. 15, 2009 combined legislative hearing for the JRMMA that ran over 8 hours.

Other medical cannabis advocates speaking at the seminar include cannabis cultivation guru Ed Rosenthal, no stranger to Madison, Michigan medical cannabis attorney Matthew Abel, Illinois patient and activist Julie Falco, along with Claytonia activist Cheryl Shuman. Julie Falco was also a participant in the Cheryl Miller Memorial Project, held in Washington DC in September 2003.

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MADISON: Is My Medicine Legal YET? Founder Jacki Rickert, the namesake of Wisconsin medical cannabis legislation, urged supporters to not give up hope and to keep pushing until their medicine is legal at a “Vigil for Victims of Medical Marijuana Prohibition” Monday on Capitol Square. She also promised supporters she would be back for next year’s vigil on June 7, 2011, and reminisced about her late friends Cheryl Miller, Mary Powers and Joe Hart, all medical cannabis activists.

Rickert was among several speakers at the vigil at the King St. corner of the State Capitol Square in downtown Madison.

I was another, explaining to attendees, onlookers and passersby about why medical cannabis patients and advocates were gathering downtown on a Monday evening with signs and a memorial table. I also talked about the loss of Mary Powers, the Army veteran and Wisconsin medical cannabis leader taken by cancer in October 2009. I noted how a year earlier, Mary had told vigil attendees that she “knew what her demise would be.”
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MADISON: Mary Powers was one of those speaking at the First Annual Vigil for Victims of Medical Marijuana Prohibition on Sunday June 7, 2009 at the State Street entrance of the Wisconsin State Capitol here in Madison. The vigil was organized by the Madison chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) and Is My Medicine Legal YET? (IMMLY).

Powers, an Army veteran and leader in the Wisconsin medical cannabis movement, died of cancer on Oct. 22, 2009, just 4 ½ months later. Mary, in her wheelchair, was a familiar figure at the Capitol. In the six months before her death, she and I visited over 80 different legislative offices talking to lawmakers and staff about the Jacki Rickert Medical Marijuana Act, AB554/SB368, which was formally introduced about a month after her passing by Sen. Jon Erpenbach (D-Waunakee) and Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Madison). Mary Powers’ state legislators, Sen. Mark Miller (D-Monona) and Rep. Kelda Helen Roys (D-Madison), both cosponsored the JRMMA.

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MADISON: A Republican Assembly representative and Public Health Committee member who was ready to vote for AB 554/SB 368, the Jacki Rickert Medical Marijuana Act if it came to a vote has announced he will not be seeking reelection this fall.

Rep. Scott Newcomer, (R-Hartland) issued a statement saying he would not seek reelection in November. Newcomer served in the Assembly since 2006. He faced a primary election fight against five fellow Republicans in September.

The Chicago Tribune reported that Newcomer’s announcement makes him the 22nd Wisconsin lawmaker legislator to give up their seat, translating to 19 open seats in the Assembly and three open seats in the Senate. That means that nearly 17% of seats will be represented by new faces and counting. Democrats currently hold a 52-46 majority in the Assembly and an 18-15 edge in the Senate.

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