Uberknot
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Meanwhile a senior policy adviser to presidential candidate Hillary Clinton applauded the progress made on the research end — and said Clinton will reschedule marijuana if she’s elected in November.
“We applaud the steps taken today by the Obama Administration to remove research barriers that have significantly limited the scientific study of marijuana,” Maya Harris, a senior policy advisor to Clinton’s campaign, said in a statement. “Marijuana is already being used for medical purposes in states across the country, and it has the potential for even further medical use. As Hillary Clinton has said throughout this campaign, we should make it easier to study marijuana so that we can better understand its potential benefits, as well as its side effects.
“As president, Hillary will build on the important steps announced today by rescheduling marijuana from a Schedule I to a Schedule II substance. She will also ensure Colorado, and other states that have enacted marijuana laws, can continue to serve as laboratories of democracy.”
State government representatives from both of the 420-legal states in the Pacific Northwest said they had hoped for more out of the DEA’s announcement.
“For Oregon, the DEA’s decision only went half the distance,” Oregon Gov. Kate Brown said in a statement on Thursday. “Broadening cannabis research beyond the National Institute on Drug Abuse is an important and necessary step. However, lack of federal guidance on banking and environmental issues has put Oregonians at risk, and today’s decision didn’t address those concerns, as we’d hoped.
“The DEA’s decision shortsightedly focuses on the technical, not practical, aspects of marijuana regulation. This makes it more difficult for states that have legalized marijuana use, or who are poised to, to proceed lawfully and safely.”
http://www.thecannabist.co/2016/08/11/dea-rescheduling-marijuana-hillary-clinton/60849/
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