U.S.
State Laws on Medical Marijuana
Source: CNN Interactive
Alabama
- Alaska - Arizona
- Arkansas
California - Colorado
- Connecticut -
Delaware
Florida - Georgia
- Hawaii - Idaho
Illinois - Iowa -
Kansas - Kentucky
Louisiana - Maine
- Massachusetts -
Maryland
Minnesota - Montana
- Nevada - New
Hampshire
North Dakota -
New Mexico - New York -
North Carolina
Ohio - Oklahoma -
Pennsylvania -
South Dakota
South Carolina -
Rhode Island - Tennessee -
Texas
Utah - Vermont -
Virginia - Washington
Wyoming - West
Virginia - Wisconsin
Bill approved:
July 1979
Current
status: Still in effect
HIghlights:
Establishes a controlled substances therapeutic research program
for patients suffering from glaucoma or cancer chemotherapy
Bill approved:
January 1983
Current
status: Repealed 1986
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substance therapeutic research program
for patients suffering from glaucoma, cancer chemotherapy, radiology,
or other disease groups
Bill (Proposition
200) approved: November. 1996
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Require persons on drugs committing violent crimes to serve
entire sentence; provide parole/probation and treatment as alternative
to incarceration for persons convicted only of personal possession
of controlled substance on first two offenses; allows doctors
to prescribe otherwise illegal substances for certain patients;
creates drug-related fund and commission.
Bill approved:
April 1981
Current
status: Repealed 1987
Highlights:
Allows licensed physicians to prescribe and administer THC capsules,
pills, or injections for the treatment of cancer and other purposes
Bill (Proposition
215) approved: November. 1996
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Allows patients to possess and cultivate marijuana for personal
medicinal use providing a physician approves it.
Bill approved:
June 1979
Current
status: April 1995
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substances therapeutic use program
for patients suffering from glaucoma, cancer chemotherapy, or
other disease groups.
Bill approved:
July 1981
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Licenses physicians to possess prescribe and marijuana for patients
suffering from glaucoma or cancer chemotherapy; makes no provisions
for the marijuana supply
No medicinal
marijuana laws
District
of Columbia:
Bill approved:
August 1981
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Reschedules marijuana as Schedule V when used for medical use
Bill approved:
June 1978
Current
status: Repealed 1984
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substances therapeutic research program
for patients suffering from cancer chemotherapy
Bill approved:
February 1980
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substances therapeutic research program
for patients suffering from glaucoma and cancer chemotherapy
No marijuana
medicinal laws
No marijuana
medicinal laws
No marijuana
medicinal laws
Bill approved:
September 1978
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substances therapeutic research program;
allows doctors to use and prescribe marijuana for glaucoma,
cancer chemotherapy, and other medically necessary procedures;
authorizes physicians to purchase marijuana from the Department
of Law Enforcement
Bill approved:
June 1979
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Reschedules marijuana as Schedule II when use for certain medicinal
purposes
No marijuana
medicinal laws
No marijuana
medicinal laws
Bill approved:
July 1991
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Allows licensed physicians to prescribe marijuana in the cases
of glaucoma, cancer chemotherapy, and spastic quadriplegia;
makes no provisions for marijuana supply
Bill approved:
September 1983
Current
status: Expired in 1987
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substances therapeutic research program
for patients suffering from glaucoma and cancer chemotherapy
| M a s s a c h u s e t t s
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Bill approved:
December 1991
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substances therapeutic research program
for patients suffering from cancer chemotherapy, radiation therapy,
glaucoma, and asthma; state proposal in January 1997 would let
residents suffering from glaucoma, asthma or chemotherapy's
side effects to legally possess marijuana for medicinal purposes.
No marijuana
medicinal laws
No marijuana
medicinal laws
Bill approved:
December 1982
Current
status: Expired in 1987
Highlights:
Schedules marijuana as Schedule II when used as part of a controlled
substances therapeutic research program for glaucoma and cancer
chemotherapy
Bill approved:
April 1980
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Appropriates funds for the establishment of a controlled substances
therapeutic research program for cancer chemotherapy
Bill approved:
April 1979
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Would reschedule THC and marijuana to Schedule II if the federal
government authorizes the prescription and administration of
these substances
Bill approved:
May 1994
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
People of Missouri request the federal government to lift the
ban of marijuana for medical purposes
Bill approved:
June 1979
Current
status: Repealed 1987
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substances research program for patients
suffering from glaucoma, cancer chemotherapy, and other disease
groups
Bill approved:
June 1981
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
A licensed pharmacist may dispense cannabis type drugs to a
person receiving radiation or cancer chemotherapy treatment
for cancer; makes no provision for marijuana supply
No marijuana
medicinal laws
No marijuana
medicinal laws
Bill approved:
March 1981
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substances therapeutic research program
for patients suffering from life or sense-threatening diseases
Bill approved:
February 1978
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substances therapeutic research program
for patients suffering from cancer chemotherapy or glaucoma
Bill approved:
June 1980
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Establishes of a controlled substances therapeutic research
program for patients suffering from glaucoma, cancer, and other
life or sense-threatening diseases; makes provisions for confiscated
marijuana to be used if necessary
| N o r t h C a r o l i n a
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Bill approved:
June 1979
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Allows physicians to prescribe marijuana for cancer chemotherapy
Bill approved:
June 1995
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Establishes a medical necessity defense for patients who possess
a doctor's note from a physician stating that he/she "would
prescribe marijuana to [the] patient if it were legal to do
so."
No marijuana
medicinal laws
Bill approved:
June 1979
Current
status: Repealed in 1987
Highlights:
Allows physicians to prescribe marijuana for glaucoma and cancer
chemotherapy
Pennsylvania
No marijuana
medicinal laws
No marijuana
medicinal laws
| S o u t h C a r o l i n a
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South Carolina
Bill approved:
February 1980
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substances therapeutic research program
for patients suffering from glaucoma, cancer chemotherapy and
radiology, or other disease groups
Bill approved:
May 1980
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substances therapeutic research program
Tennessee
Bill approved:
April 1981
Current
status: Repealed in 1992
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substances therapeutic research program
for patients suffering from glaucoma, cancer chemotherapy or
radiology
Bill approved:
June 1979
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substances therapeutic research program
for patients suffering from cancer or glaucoma
No medicinal
marijuana laws
Bill approved:
April 1981
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Allows a physician to prescribe marijuana for cancer and other
medicinal uses; makes no provisions for marijuana supply
Bill approved:
March 1979
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Allows physicians to prescribe marijuana for glaucoma and cancer;
allows pharmacists to dispense marijuana for medical purposes;
makes no provisions for marijuana supply
Bill approved:
April 1996
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Appropriates $130,000 for the establishment of a controlled
substances therapeutic research program and to research tamper-free
means of cultivating marijuana for medicinal purposes
No medicinal
marijuana laws
Bill approved:
June 1979
Current
status: Still in effect
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substances therapeutic research program
for patients suffering from cancer chemotherapy and glaucoma;
allows physicians to prescribe marijuana; allows licensed pharmacies
to dispense marijuana; makes no provisions for marijuana supply
Bill approved:
April 1982
Current status:
Still in effect
Highlights:
Establishes a controlled substances therapeutic research program
for glaucoma, cancer chemotherapy, and other disease groups; allows
physicians to prescribe marijuana; allows certain pharmacies to
dispense marijuana; makes no provisions for marijuana supply
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