What's new
  • ICMag with help from Landrace Warden and The Vault is running a NEW contest in November! You can check it here. Prizes are seeds & forum premium access. Come join in!

Wisconsin Medical Marijuana Legislation

1

10jed

"Especially you Buddydro"

Certainly did not mean to offend or take away from anyone else's deeds and words. I only said that because you seem to be the guy most on the front lines right now. True or not no matter... Thanks for correcting me and pointing out the others so selflessly.
As of my previous post I actually can now PM so I will drop you one in the next few days.

Jed
 

Wheels_04

New member
Yesterday I sent a hand written letter to the governor just in my free time. Wisconsin can be smart after all. We are all doing a great part.
 

GrassRoots

Active member
I wrote the governor of your great state to let him know I would be moving there and bringing my tax dollars with me if they legalize for medicinal. I Figure every effort we make must count for something. I hope we see this laws pass.
 

buddydro

Member
OK People - Here's The Buzz I Heard From The Inside-

OK People - Here's The Buzz I Heard From The Inside-

This is what I'm hearing from some folks who are inside and keeping score

3 fairly secure votes in Senate Health Commitee for Bill as written

4th kinda secure vote with amended Bill

4th vote for Bill as written IS A POSSIBLE REALITY if everyone continues to step up their efforts.


SO-

There is still a chance this thing will pass as written

There is a real good chance this thing will pass with ammendment(no Patient or Care Giver cultivation)

My gut - As written baby! :prettyplease:


Only if we keep it up.

This movement reminds me of the movie Close Encounters Of The Third Kind - people everywhere in Wisconsin are coming out :hide: in masse NOW - to a calling - ain't no coincidence IMO!


We need to charge to the finish line NOW!
 

buddydro

Member
Two Major Events To Attend In WI Next Week

Two Major Events To Attend In WI Next Week

Here's your chance to make your voice heard.

We need everyone to make the trip to Madison for this event.

The floodgates need to open in Madison on this day! Please attend and tell everyone you know to attend too.

With a strong show of support - I believe that this day can become the tipping point in this battle.




Second Medical Marijuana Lobby Day on Wed. Feb. 24, 2010

[FONT=MS Sans Serif, Arial]On Wed. Feb. 24, 2010, medical marijuana supporters will be back at the Wisconsin State Capitol in Madison for a second Lobby Day for the Jacki Rickert Medical Marijuana Act. Please join us at noon for a rally in the ground floor rotunda of the Capitol. Weather permitting, we will gather outside at 11:45 am for a Native American pipe ceremony with Ojibwe sacred singer/drummer Al Baker, after which we will circle the Capitol before entering for the rotunda rally beginning at noon. Please join us, or plan to contact your legislators via phone or email if you can't make it to the Capitol. Jacki Rickert, Gary Storck, Al Baker and others will speak. [/FONT][FONT=MS Sans Serif, Arial]Playing offense to pass the Jacki Rickert MMJ Act [/FONT]


[FONT=MS Sans Serif, Arial]Date: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 [/FONT]
[FONT=MS Sans Serif, Arial]Time: 12:00pm - 3:00pm [/FONT]
[FONT=MS Sans Serif, Arial]Location: Wisconsin State Capitol [/FONT]
[FONT=MS Sans Serif, Arial]Street: 2 E. Main St. [/FONT]
[FONT=MS Sans Serif, Arial]City/Town: Madison, WI[/FONT]
 

buddydro

Member
Two Major Events To Attend In WI Next Week

Two Major Events To Attend In WI Next Week

Join IMMLY, UW-Waukesha Students for a Democratic Society and Wisconsin Residents for Assembly Bill 554 on Monday, February 22nd at UW Waukesha for an open discussion on Assembly Bill 554/Senate Bill 368, the Jacki Rickert Medical Marijuana Act and what it can do for Wisconsin.

The evening is free to attend, but seating is limited to 200 people; be sure to show up early and check out the information tables.

Speakers include the authors of the JRMMA, State Sen. Jon Erpenbach (D-27th District), Rep. Mark Pocan (D-78th District) along with IMMLY Founder Jacki Rickert and Gary Storck of IMMLY plus a special performance of "Legal Medicine Blues" by singer-songwriter Rick Harris.

This is a non-profit event sponsored by Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) of UW Waukesha.

Monday, February 22, 2010
Time: 7:00pm - 9:00pm
University of Wisconsin - Waukesha
Room N133
1500 N. University Drive
Waukesha, WI

http://www.immly.org/immly-waukesha2019.htm
 

buddydro

Member
How A Bill Becomes Law In Wisconsin

How A Bill Becomes Law In Wisconsin

Thank you jimih2.

Right now this bill is in committee. Action needs to be taken in Senate Health Commitee first. By March 3rd if I'm not nistaken

We need 4 votes out of the 7:

Erpenbach,

Lassa,

Robson

and Carpenter. (amendment author)

OR

Get one of the GOP'S on commitee to vote in favor in committee:

Lazich, Darling, or Kanavas

( I can tell you right now that Kanavas is not that guy:moon:, so all efforts should be directed at Lazich and Darling)



How the Wisconsin Legislature Works
Overview:
Wisconsin has 33 senators and 99 Assembly representatives. Each senate district represents about 150,000 citizens. Each senate district is further divided into three Assembly districts, each representing about 50,000 citizens.

In January of each odd-numbered year, a new legislature is sworn into office for a two-year period called a “biennium.” During the biennium, the legislature is in continuous session with a schedule of alternating floor periods and committee work periods.

During any given biennium, approximately 2000 bills, joint resolutions and simple resolutions are introduced in the Senate and Assembly. Only one-fourth of these measures will become law.

How a bill is introduced
Any senator or representative may introduce legislation. Ideas for legislation can come from a legislator, a constituent, a group of citizens, a state agency, a business or a combination of sources. Once the legislation is properly drafted and other legislators have co-sponsored the legislation, the bill is introduced. The bill is given a bill number, read a first time, noted in the official journal of the house in which the bill is introduced, and referred to a committee.

Committee action on a bill
At the discretion of the committee chair, a public hearing may be scheduled. The hearing is open to the public and anyone may appear to speak or register for or against the measure. After the hearing, the committee meets in executive session where committee members may offer amendments to the bill, and to vote on amendments to the bill and the bill itself. If the bill is approved, it is reported to the house in which the bill originated.

Committee action on a bill
Bills reported out of committee are considered “available for scheduling”. For bills originating in the Assembly, the Assembly Rules Committee determines if the bill will go before the full Assembly. In the Senate, the Senate Organization Committee makes that determination.

Action in the first house
When a bill reaches the floor of either house, it is given its second reading by title. The question for the members is “Shall the bill be ordered to a third reading?” After the second reading but before a bill is ordered to a third reading, the members debate the bill and may offer amendments.

Engrossment, third reading and final passage
A vote to engross the bill incorporates any adopted amendments and technical changes and occurs at the third reading state. After the bill is read a third time, the question is, “Shall the bill pass?” If the members pass the bill, it is messaged to the other house.

Bill is placed on the calendar
The bill follows the same procedure as in the first house. If no changes are made by the second house, the bill is enrolled when a clean copy is prepared of the text as agreed to by both houses.

If the second house makes changes to the bill, it goes back to the first house for concurrence. If the two houses cannot agree on the language of the bill, a “Committee of Conference” made up of members from both houses is appointed to reconcile the differences. Both houses vote on the Conference Committee report and if both houses approve the report, the bill is enrolled.

The governor’s role
The Governor has six days (excluding Sunday) to approve or veto a bill. The governor can: 1) sign a bill, in which case it becomes law; 2) fail to sign it within six days, whereby the bill would become law; 3) veto the bill 4) veto certain parts of the bill (in any legislation involving an expenditure of funds, the governor may exercise his line-item veto power where parts of a piece of legislation are vetoed.)

Veto review
If the governor vetoes a bill, it returns to the house in which the bill originated along with the governor’s objections to the proposal. The session schedule provides a specific floor period for the consideration of all gubernatorial vetoes. The first house can override a gubernatorial veto with a two-thirds vote. If a two-thirds vote to override is achieved in the first house, the bill goes to the second house where it also takes a two-thirds vote to override the governor’s veto. If either house fails to achieve a two-thirds vote to override, the JRMMA becomes law!
 

CANNACO-OP

Farmassist
Veteran
Good morning Wisconsin! Question. When was the first FDA approved "cannabis / marijuana" based medicine available in the USA?
 
1

10jed

Good morning Wisconsin! Question. When was the first FDA approved "cannabis / marijuana" based medicine available in the USA?

It was fda approved for chemo in 1985, and then approved for eating disorders in 1992. It was changed from a schedule 1 to schedule 2 in 1986 and then to schedule 3 in 1999. Seems to me I remember this being around and available in the 70's though, but what I just read said 1985.

Jed
 

CANNACO-OP

Farmassist
Veteran
I got the same info, also an older gentleman told me Marinol first intro in 1986 ish and was an inferor medicine back then as much as it does now.
 
G

guest

( I can tell you right now that Kanavas is not that guy:moon:, so all efforts should be directed at Lazich and Darling)[/QUOTE]

You said it Buddy,These are two people we should be concentrateing on and hope we have a good turn out on the lobby day..Time is literally running out, now we have to make the push,we need people to come out of the closet..Hey Canna hows it going bro??..Jimi
 

buddydro

Member
We going to "open the floodgates" on Capital

We going to "open the floodgates" on Capital

( I can tell you right now that Kanavas is not that guy:moon:, so all efforts should be directed at Lazich and Darling)

You said it Buddy,These are two people we should be concentrateing on and hope we have a good turn out on the lobby day..Time is literally running out, now we have to make the push,we need people to come out of the closet..Hey Canna hows it going bro??..Jimi[/quote]


We going to have an amazaing turnout on Wednesday jimih2

Going to be my entire focus between now and then- spreading the word and begging for attendence

Telling others to spread the word - can't talk to everyone myself ya know what I mean?

Picture everyone circling the Capital without taking a step!


Friend of mine mentioned it - I'll do everything I can to make his dream come true. Owe him anyways . . .
 

Latest posts

Latest posts

Top