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Column: The New O'Shaughnessy's
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n578/a08.html
Newshawk: Jay Bergstrom
Pubdate: Wed, 14 Apr 2004
Source: Anderson Valley Advertiser (CA)
Column: Cannabinotes
Copyright: 2004 Anderson Valley Advertiser
Contact: ava@pacific.net
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2667
Author: Fred Gardner
Cited: O'Shaughnessy's http://www.ccrmg.org/journal.html
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?323
(GW Pharmaceuticals)
THE NEW O'SHAUGHNESSY'S
The Spring 2004 O'Shaughnessy's -the journal of the California
Cannabis Research Medical Group-is out. It's aimed at
doctors who are open-minded about the clinical applications of
cannabis and want to stay abreast of the relevant studies and
legal developments. The editor ( your correspondent ) hopes
the material will be of interest to patients, caregivers and
concerned citizens, too.
The 16 doctors associated with the CCRMG are studying the safety,
efficacy and applicability of using cannabis to treat a wide range
of conditions. Collectively they have written almost half
the letters of approval authorizing Californians to medicate with
cannabis. ( O'Shaughnessy's estimates that about 100,000
Californians have obtained physician approval to do so since Prop
215 passed in 1996. The figure is based on an extrapolation
from the number of physician approvals issued in Oregon, which
maintains a registry of medical cannabis users. ) The lead
article in the Spring '04 issue is a detailed and insightful
description of Dr. Frank Lucido's practice, written by
Lucido with Mariavittoria Mangini, PhD, FNP. There's also:
* A "poster session" on the regulatory role of
endocannabinoids. ( Investigators have found
endocannabinoids -neurotransmitters that activate the same
receptors as plant cannabinoids-in each of these bodily systems:
cardiovascular, digestive, endocrine, extretory, immunological,
nervous, reproductive, and respiratory. )
* A compendium of conditions that GW Pharmaceuticals expects its
cannabis-based medicines to ameliorate ( citing all the studies
that substantiate their optimism ).
* A thorough review of the significant court rulings to date (
with references and with additional commentary by the Medical
Marijuana Patients Union ).
* A feature story about the amazing "Volcano" vaporizer.
And, as they say, much, much more. The CCRMG mailing address
is p.o. box 9143 Berkeley CA 94709. Subscriptions are
$12 for four issues. Single issues by mail are $4.
Hospitals Into Condos
"The Presidio Trust chose a Cleveland-based developer Monday
to convert the Presidio's historic Public Health Service Hospital
into an apartment complex with as many as 350 units..." So
began a story by Katia Hetter in the S.F. Chronicle April
13. "The trust expects Forest City to pay at least $1
million a year under a long-term lease to renovate the hospital
building and run the residential development."
The director of the Presidio Trust, Craig Middleton, is assuring
the neighbors that the chosen developers are committed to
"historic preservation" -as if the big looming danger,
as our public health infrastructure gets slid into private hands,
is architectural. What a slick misdirection play.
The Presidio's Public Health Service Hospital, which closed as a
hospital in 1981 and has stood vacant since 1988, is a U-shaped
7-story complex with a central structure built in the 1930s and
two wings built in the '50s. The driveway to the main
entrance is at 15th Ave., west of Lake Street ( a classy
neighborhood ).
When the AIDS epidemic was escalating in the early 1980s, some
sensible citizens suggested that the USPHS Hospital should be used
to care for AIDS patients and to conduct related research.
The classy neighbors opposed the idea and -conveniently-the
building was found to be seismically unsound.
Decision-makers at UCSF also ruled out AIDS wards at the two
hospitals on Parnassus Heights, and so the dying gay men were
shuttled off to General Hospital in the Mission, a working class
neighborhood, where the weather happens to be better.
The Presidio USPHS Hospital was a factor in my one serious
confrontation with Mayor Willie Brown, which took place in late
2001. At the time some powerful figures in the city,
including Brown, had it in for my boss, District Attorney Terence
Hallinan. After KRON-TV ran a highly publicized hit piece in
which SFPD narcotics officers accused Hallinan of failing to
prosecute crack-dealing on Sixth Street, Brown called a meeting of
all city department heads to review the tape and discuss the
implications ( which Brown hoped would be a drive to recall
Hallinan ). Hallinan sensed a trap and sent me and his chief
assistant, Paul Cummins, to represent the office.
The meeting was held in the mayor's spacious, high-ceilinged
conference room. The mayor himself was all smiles, having
just come from a meeting with the son of the President of China.
Reporter Vic Lee and producer Robbie Peele were there to show
their slanted footage and to film the response of the department
heads, about 20 of whom were seated around a magnificent oak
table.
The KRON tape rolled, the lights came back on, and the
denunciations of Hallinan began. Public Defender Jeff Brown
( of all people ), Presiding Superior Court Judge Alfred
Chiantelli, and a politico whom I can't recall, each expressed
variations on the theme: if only the DA would charge crack sales
more harshly, life on Sixth Street would soon be civilized.
Then I said something like: "If you think all you're seeing
when you look at those desperate people on Sixth Street is the
effects of crack cocaine, you're kidding yourselves. You're
looking at mental illness, poverty, alcoholism, malnutrition,
unemployment, homelessness, HIV, hepatitis C... "
It was enough to break the momentum of the attack. To my
surprise, the mayor looked at me earnestly and said, "What
would you do?" I said that for openers there needed to be an
accurate census of who was on the street and why. Obviously
there would be two broad categories: people who could care for
themselves and needed housing and work, and those who couldn't and
needed residential treatment. Then I said, "There's a
US Public Health Service hospital standing unused in the Presidio,
off 15th and Lake..." As soon as I mentioned the location,
the Mayor lost interest. I could see it in his eyes.
Willie Brown knows that God doesn't like to see people dying on
the streets while the public hospital stands empty -but He doesn't
have as much clout as the Presidio Heights bourgeoisie.
After the USPHS Hospital withstood the 1989 earthquake, I figured
the "seismically unsound" label was a shuck. ( I'd
seen UCSF administrators use it to red-tag solid old buildings
they wanted to remove or replace. ) And sure enough, in due
course I heard from another Presido Trust tenant -a master printer
and publisher of fine editions-that the engineer in charge of the
hospital had confided to him that it was very solid, in need of
only minor structural repairs.
And they shall turn their hospitals into condos for a lousy $1
million a year... As if there's never going to be another
earthquake or epidemic or unexpected catastrophe in San Francisco!
The Future of Hunters Point
The transfer of the decommissioned military bases to real estate
developers in our time is comparable to the giveaway of public
lands to the railroad barons in the 19th century. The
developers already control the Presidio ( Nancy Pelosi brokered
the deal ), and Treasure Island ( thanks to Willie Brown ).
They will get the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard, too, unless the
community makes an 11th-hour demand to control its development
-starting with the clean-up. ( "Toxic waste"
serves the same purpose as "seismic problems" when the
elites don't want working people or students to use a given piece
of real property. )
African Americans were drawn to San Francisco in large numbers
because the shipyard provided decent jobs. Ever since it
closed, the economic and social well-being of the community has
deteriorated. At the start of the 1960s, 17 percent of San
Francisco voters were African-American. By 2001 it was nine
percent and falling. Urban renewal in the Fillmore turned
out to be "Negro removal," just like the radical city
planners said.
Now that the yard is being transferred by the Navy to the city,
its development should be controlled by the community. A
community-based corporation should be formed to evaluate the
pollution problem and the various clean-up technologies, including
bio-remediation ( using plants to leach out the toxins ). By
taking control of the clean-up, the residents of Hunters Point
would guarantee ( 1 ) that the job gets done thoroughly and
correctly; and ( 2 ) that their company gets the experience, the
credit, and the money ( which the feds acknowledge they owe ).
This week a 29-year old SFPD officer -working undercover in the
Bayview district for the gang task force-was shot to death as he
began to question a 21-year-old black man. Mayor Newsom
promptly vowed to send more cops into the community "to show
how much we care." No way is the presence of more cops going
to change the murderous dynamic. Only by recognizing and
starting to pursue their common interests will the so-called gangs
-"Big Block" and "Westmob-make peace. The
leadership has to come from within the black community, it can't
be imposed by an occupying force, no matter how humanely they're
trying to operate. The unifying demand has to be: Hunters
Point is ours to develop.
The cops and DAs used to say that the ongoing conflict between Big
Block and Westmob was over drug-sale revenues, which both factions
used to purchase recording-studio time. If the lads got it
together to take control of the shipyard, they could have a
state-of-the-art studio that would be the envy of the whole HipHop
world.
Another useful business appropriate for Hunters Point would be a
farm. There are several acres with deep topsoil, and the
climate is the warmest and sunniest in the city... But you
know, dear reader, and even I know, that it's only a matter of
time before the Stewart Group or the Shorenstein Group or some
other developer seals the deal to pave it over.
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