House DFL backers of getting medical marijuana to critically ill children and adults say they have reached a compromise that could conclude what has been one of the this year's most contentious issues.
The deal, announced by House Speaker Paul Thissen, Majority Leader Erin Murphy and Rep. Carly Melin on Thursday, would create clinical trials of medical marijuana for the severely ill. If the medical researchers cannot obtain marijuana for the trial -- and they may not be able to because marijuana is a federally illegal substance -- the proposal would include "the option of a state-based manufacture of medication" for the trial.
The proposal closely follows a compromise DFL Gov. Mark Dayton came up with, except it adds in the possibility of state manufacture "if no federal clinical trial is approved." The plan would also add vaporization of marijuana for trial participants.
Thursday afternoon, Dayton said he was unsure whether he could support the new proposal.
"The bill places heavy new responsibilities on the Minnesota Department of Health, and I have asked Commissioner Ehlinger to assess the costs of its implementation and its practicability. I also want legal counsel to assess the potential liability to the State from sponsoring such trials," he said in a statement. "I will need that information before making any decision."
The House plan would stop well short of what some advocates had wanted.
"There will be no grow-your-own dispensaries and no smoking of marijuana permitted," under the plan, a news release said.
"All along, our goal has been a compromise that provides needed medicine to children and Minnesotans who need it while responding to concerns from law enforcement and the health community," Thissen, DFL-Minneapolis, said in a statement.