Register ICMag Forum Menu Features
You are viewing our:
in:
Forums > Talk About It! > Medicinal Cannabis Forum > US RI: Senate Overrides Governor's Veto of Medical Marijuana

Thread Title Search
Click to Visit Greenpoint Seeds
Post Reply
US RI: Senate Overrides Governor's Veto of Medical Marijuana Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 07-02-2005, 07:30 AM #1
Guest
Guest

Posts: n/a
Talking US RI: Senate Overrides Governor's Veto of Medical Marijuana

US RI: Senate Overrides Governor's Veto of Medical Marijuana
US RI: Senate Overrides Governor's Veto of Medical Marijuana
URL: https://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n1056/a11.html
Newshawk: Richard Lake
Rate this article Votes: 0
Webpage: https://www.projo.com/news/content/p...p1.24a1910.html
Pubdate: Fri, 01 Jul 2005
Source: Providence Journal, The (RI)
Copyright: 2005 The Providence Journal Company
Contact: letters@projo.com
Website: https://www.projo.com/
Details: https://www.mapinc.org/media/352
Authors: Liz Anderson, Scott Mayerowitz and Bruce Landis, Journal Staff Writers
Bookmark: https://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)

SENATE OVERRIDES GOVERNOR'S VETO OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA

And as the clock ticked toward a new fiscal year, the Senate also releases the state's $6.35-billion budget that was signed by Governor Carcieri.

PROVIDENCE -- Working late into the night, weary lawmakers slogged on toward adjournment yesterday, battling over whether to institute new controls on prostitution and wine sales, confirming a new director of the state Department of Environmental Management and holding a Senate vote to override Governor Carcieri's veto of medical marijuana legislation.

In voting 28 to 6 in favor of the override, senators rejected objections of Senate Minority Leader Dennis L. Algiere, R-Westerly, who said that while the governor supports "effective pain management techniques," marijuana is "an addictive drug" and the override would mean that "nearly anyone" in the state could grow the plant.

The House sponsor of the bill, Rep. Thomas Slater, D-Providence, said House Speaker William J. Murphy, D-West Warwick, had agreed to an override vote, but not today.

With hours to go before a new lead-paint safety law was scheduled to kick in, the House joined the Senate in voting to delay the law's implementation to Nov. 1. The bills to do so still need a Senate vote before they go to the governor.

The debate continued at press time. But first, Rep. Roger Picard, D-Woonsocket, won what he said was a symbolic vote from his colleagues in favor of a different bill to delay the law one year, calling the longer lag a "prudent thing to do."

And with hours to go before the start of the new fiscal year, at midnight, the Senate released, to the governor, the state's $6.35-billion tax-and-spending package for the new year. Carcieri signed the bill last night, marking the first time the budget was finalized on time since July 2002.

Over loud Republican objections, the House passed a bill giving the Narragansett Bay Commission the status of a regional agency controlled by the representatives of the towns it services.

The Bay Commission provides sewage treatment for 360,000 people in communities, which are Providence, North Providence, Johnston, Pawtucket, Central Falls, Cumberland, Lincoln, the northern portion of East Providence and small sections of Cranston and Smithfield.

The commission is building the largest public works project in the state, a huge underground system to keep sewage from flowing into the Bay when rainstorms overwhelm existing sewer systems.

The bill, one of several implementing the separation-of-powers amendment to the state Constitution, would give control over the commission to a board appointed by the mayors of the communities it served.

Democrats insisted that the cities and towns, whose residents pay the commission's expenses through their sewer bills, should control the agency.

The Republicans pushed an unsuccessful amendment that would have given the governor control over the board and the power to appoint its members. They argued that even though the commission handles its own finances, the state would end up paying the costs if it failed.

THE HOUSE ALSO battled at length over a bill that would prevent local wineries from taking Internet and telephone orders from Rhode Island customers; a prohibition opponents said would also end up blocking customers in many other states from placing such orders.

The bill was backed by wine wholesalers and liquor retailers as their answer to a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling, which said states cannot apply one law to in-state wineries and another to out-of-state wineries. Rhode Island residents, under state law, must be physically standing at an out-of-state winery in order to have that wine shipped to their home address.

House Corporations Committee Chairman Brian Patrick Kennedy, D-Hopkinton, suggested the state instead open up its ordering laws. He distributed a letter from state Economic Development Corporation Executive Director Michael McMahon, who maintained that the wholesalers' bill, if approved, could cost the state lost sales taxes and "the benefit of a strong, locally grown and nurtured $2.4-million vineyard industry.

Lawmakers whose districts include the state's four wineries supported Kennedy's proposed amendment. They said Internet sales were a small fraction of the market -- but a crucial one for small businesses looking to get their product more widely known.

But the sponsor, Rep. Norman Landroche, D-West Warwick, countered that the state should preserve its "three-tier" system where wineries sell to wholesalers who sell to retail stores, and its requirement that there be a "face to face transaction" to purchase alcohol as a safeguard against selling to minors.

House Majority Leader Gordon D. Fox, D-Providence, acknowledged the bill could hurt local wineries but said it was "the only way to create a barrier" against opening up the Rhode Island consumer market directly to the world.

Lawmakers voted 20 to 42 against Kennedy's amendment, and then 46 to 19 in favor of Landroche's bill. A similar Senate bill is also awaiting a House vote.

The House also passed a bill that would require anyone applying for a massage license to be fingerprinted and undergo a national criminal background check; allow the state to deny a license to anyone with a conviction for a sexual offense; and give the state the power to immediately shut down any massage parlor with unlicensed employees.

The bill, from Rep. Joseph Moran, the Central Falls police chief, is an attempt to get at a loophole in state law that prevents the police from arresting people for indoor prostitution. The police say brothels hide behind a facade that they are "massage parlors" or "spas."

Opponents, like Rep. Arthur Handy, D-Cranston, said the bill casts "an enormously wide net" that will provide new hassles for legal masseuses trying to get licensed but will fail to catch prostitutes, who won't bother with the state paperwork.

But Rep. Joseph McNamara, D-Warwick, hailed it as a "creative approach to a problem which has been around for centuries." The bill passed by a vote of 53 to 11; it now goes to the Senate.

IN OTHER legislative action yesterday:

The Senate confirmed W. Michael Sullivan as the new director of the state Department of Environmental Management. Sullivan, a professor of agronomy at the University of Rhode Island, is a former state senator and Richmond town councilor and now the first scientist to head the DEM.

The Senate sent on to the governor legislation that would prohibit any community from having a residency law for any municipal employee.

The House voted to give the children and spouses of any Rhode Island National Guard member killed in the line of duty the right to four years of free tuition at any state college. The state already offers the benefit to the families of slain police officers and firefighters. The legislation now goes to the governor.

The Senate sent to the governor a bill that would give the attorney general the power to review an ownership change at a public radio station and, if he determines that a sale or transfer is not in the community's interest, to level a "conversion fee" based on all donations plus the station's annual revenue. The bill stems from a recently canceled proposal by Boston University to sell WRNI-AM in Providence.

The Senate voted in favor of banning the additive MTBE, or methyl tertiary butyl ether, from gasoline sold in Rhode Island beginning on June 1, 2007. The additive travels quickly through ground water, and was responsible for contaminating the drinking water of thousands of Burrillville residents in 2001. The House has approved similar legislation.

The Senate sent the governor a bill that would make it easier for landlords to evict students with seasonal leases.
Quote


Old 07-02-2005, 07:49 PM #2
bartender187
Bakin in da Sun

bartender187's Avatar

Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Planet Zeldar
Posts: 2,949
bartender187 is a jewel in the roughbartender187 is a jewel in the roughbartender187 is a jewel in the roughbartender187 is a jewel in the roughbartender187 is a jewel in the roughbartender187 is a jewel in the roughbartender187 is a jewel in the rough
YES!

One more state down, a few handfuls to go.

We are proggressin, slowly but surely. Slow and steady wins the race.

take care,
bartender187
__________________
Timid men prefer the calm of despotism to the tempestous sea of liberty. - Thomas Jefferson
bartender187 is offline Quote


Old 07-03-2005, 01:31 AM #3
Guest
Guest

Posts: n/a
Great News
Quote


Post Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off


All times are GMT +2. The time now is 01:33 PM.


Click for Sweet Seeds!


This site is for educational and entertainment purposes only.
You must be of legal age to view ICmag and participate here.
All postings are the responsibility of their authors.
Powered by: vBulletin Copyright ©2000 - 2018, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.