Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Author: Eric Bailey, Times Staff
Writer
Published: July 18, 2005
Copyright: 2005 Los Angeles
Times
Contact: letters@latimes.com
Website: https://www.latimes.com/
Washington,
D.C. -- He is an unabashed Big Business conservative. She's a liberal who favors
the little guy. He's a Washington insider dating back to the days of Nixon.
She's all of 29 yet has landed in jail plenty of times for underdog acts of
civil disobedience.
Now Beltway lobbyist Jim Tozzi and bicoastal activist
Steph Sherer have teamed up for an uphill cause: They aim to legalize medical
marijuana in all 50 states.
Sherer's stake is personal and professional.
She uses cannabis daily for a spinal injury suffered during her arrest at a
Washington protest five years ago. Sherer also runs Oakland-based Americans for
Safe Access, a nonprofit bent on making marijuana available to any patient in
need.
Tozzi, graying and dark-suited at 67, has come to her aid with a
federal law spawned at the behest of corporate America. In 2000, Tozzi helped
craft legislation that lets the private sector challenge the scientific
reliability of government regulations.
Medical marijuana activists like
Sherer consider Tozzi's handiwork a potential boon for a movement thwarted by
cops and the courts, most recently a U.S. Supreme Court decision that declined
to protect cannabis patients from federal prosecution.
Sherer, an
energetic new combatant in a battle that's raged for generations, said she
believes medical marijuana activists now have the scientific goods to counter
government assertions that pot has no proven medical efficacy.
If U.S.
health officials fess up that marijuana is good medicine, she says, the
government won't be able to continue blocking the 33-year effort by activists to
have cannabis dropped from the restrictive list of illicit drugs, which includes
heroin and LSD. That, in turn, could stoke research into prescription forms of
cannabis, as well as wider and less contentious medical use.
"There's no
way the statement that marijuana has no accepted medical value is true anymore,"
Sherer said, citing 6,500 scientific articles from around the world on medical
cannabis, as well as the thousands of doctor recommendations in California and
nine other states still defying federal prohibitions.
So far, federal
officials have rebuffed the pleas of Americans for Safe Access.
Arthur J.
Lawrence, the assistant U.S. surgeon general, wrote in an April 20 rejection
letter that the federal government already has undertaken an exhaustive review
of marijuana's medicinal merits. That effort began in 2002 when medical
marijuana supporters petitioned U.S. regulators to yank cannabis from Schedule
1, which is reserved for abused drugs devoid of medical value. Lawrence reasoned
that Scherer's Data Quality Act request amounted to a duplication of effort.
Scherer countered that Lawrence is ignoring mounting evidence that pot
is good medicine and the act's intent: to quickly correct mistakes in the
government record. Americans for Safe Access, which claims 12,000 patients on
its rolls, has appealed. U.S. Health and Human Services officials have until
Tuesday to respond.
The Bush administration gives no indication of
bending.
Although there have been "suggestions" that some elements of the
herb might be developed into prescription drugs, potential benefits are
outweighed by a "manifest risk" of widespread abuse, said David Murray, a White
House Office of National Drug Control Policy analyst.
Even if new
marijuana-based drugs were approved, Murray said, they would not likely have
"the character of the raw crude leaf."
For Sherer, relief comes with a
dropper of liquid cannabis extract six times a day.
The drug, she says,
doesn't make her high but eases otherwise unyielding pain and spasms at the base
of her neck.
Growing up in Austin, Texas, Sherer always preferred
microbrew beer to marijuana. But that relationship with cannabis changed in
2000, she said, after a U.S. marshal hit her from behind during an International
Monetary Fund protest. Scherer's civil lawsuit against the U.S. is winding
toward trial.
The blow caused a ligament in her neck to snap. After a
year of treatment with heavy pain medications, Sherer said, her kidneys began to
shut down.
When her doctor asked if she knew anyone who smoked pot or how
to get it, Sherer wondered if he had gone off the deep end.
The
recommendation that she use pot as a painkiller changed both Sherer's medical
status and her career path. Instead of focusing her budding organizational
skills on world trade issues, she made medical marijuana her prime
cause.
Americans for Safe Access has since has blossomed into one of the
most active medical marijuana groups in the nation.
Last summer, Sherer
discovered Tozzi's law and got an idea. She would turn the pro-business act on
its head and apply it to medical marijuana, arguably one of America's most
quixotic consumer causes.
She had never met Tozzi, but the godfather of
data quality showed up uninvited when Sherer held a news conference last October
in Washington to announce her scheme.
Sherer fretted that Tozzi was up to
no good. Instead, he said he wanted to help.
"I figured a little shot of
support from me, from someone they'd never expect, would help a group that has
been battered around quite a bit," he said.
Tozzi, having spent a
lifetime working Washington's back corridors, calls himself "a regulatory nerd."
He started in the Office of Management and Budget during the 1960s, after a
military tour in Vietnam and a failed attempt to make it as a jazz trumpet
player in New Orleans. By the Reagan era, Tozzi had climbed to a top spot at
OMB.
He promptly shifted to the private sector, got a big office near
Dupont Circle in Washington and, the ultimate insider, forged a reputation as a
lobbyist who can massage the Washington work product for clients like the
tobacco industry and chemical companies.
Tozzi played a key role in 1996
in establishing the Center for Regulatory Effectiveness, a business advocacy
group that runs a website devoted to monitoring the wind shifts of government
regulations. Out of that he launched the Data Quality Act.
Just a few
lines tucked into a 712-page omnibus bill, the act has had far-reaching
fallout.
Environmental and consumer groups consider Tozzi a sort of
regulatory Dr. Evil, a stealthy genius whose little tweak of federal rules has
hurt attempts to tame exploitation of the wilderness and workplace. Businesses
view it as a way to check unwarranted government regulation.
Salt
companies used the act to challenge government pronouncements about negative
health effects. Builders fought claims about polluted runoff from construction
sites. Chemical companies battled rules that threatened top-selling
products.
Despite her liberal credentials, Sherer has developed an
effective working relationship with Tozzi. And mutual admiration.
"I was
expecting someone from the shadow government, like the cancer man from the
'X-Files,' " Scherer said. Instead she got "this charismatic character who fills
every corner of the room with his personality."
Tozzi, meanwhile, thinks
Scherer is underemployed. "She's doing God's work at great personal sacrifice,"
he said. "But when she gets this issue straightened out, she can go
anywhere."
Sherer introduced Tozzi to medical marijuana patients. One in
particular struck him.
She was a schoolteacher in her early 60s who
looked "just like Betty Crocker," Tozzi recalled. The woman said she had always
been a law-abiding citizen but had been forced to buy pot on the streets to
treat her multiple sclerosis.
"I don't know if she was more bothered by
the pain of her illness or the pain of her actions," he said.
But this
master of the regulatory chessboard had more than just altruistic motives. Since
its inception, the Data Quality Act has been under attack as a weapon of big
business, a stealthy way to keep federal agencies tied in knots over what
constitutes sound science.
Eager to blunt such criticism and dash
attempts to thwart his law in Congress, Tozzi has pushed public interest groups
to start deploying the act against the bureaucrats. Legalization of medical
marijuana, he said, could prove a powerful court test of government resistance
to his beloved Data Quality Act.
But does this bid by Scherer and Tozzi
stand a chance?
Peter Meyers, a George Washington University law
professor who in the 1970s fought for removal of cannabis from the federal
government list of dangerous drugs, doesn't hold out much hope. He considers
marijuana prohibition a part of a broader moral crusade being waged by the Bush
administration.
"This has nothing to do with the medical debate," he
said. "I think it's simply politics."
Jon Gettman, a George Mason School
of Public Policy senior fellow who is leading the current bid to get marijuana
removed from that list, believes the Data Quality Act challenge puts extra
pressure on federal regulators.
And he welcomes the oddball pairing of
Tozzi the conservative and Sherer the activist.
"The idea of overlapping
interests and strange bedfellows is a sign of a very healthy political system,"
he said. "I think James Madison would be delighted."
Note: Steph Sherer
teams up with a Beltway lobbyist in fight to lift the ban on medical
marijuana.
Americans For Safe Access
https://www.safeaccessnow.org/
CannabisNews Medical Marijuana Archives
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