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If medical marijuana bill passes, what can Illinois expect?

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Under Illinois' current bill, employers would still be able to enforce zero-tolerance drug policies. Patients would have to register with the state Department of Public Health, submitting written certification from their physician, before receiving a registry identification card. Active public safety personnel, such as law enforcement officers, paramedics, emergency medical technicians, firefighters, and state or county correctional officers would be barred from the program. Designated caregivers and "nonprofit medical cannabis organizations" would also have to register with the state, which would create a database to track participants.

Where to get it

In the Illinois draft bill, the state would initially limit nonprofit dispensaries where marijuana could be purchased to 59, or one per senate district.

Patients, or a caregiver, would then be allowed to buy 2.5 ounces of "usable cannabis" from their designated dispensary during a 14-day period. Patients, who would not be able to legally grow their own marijuana plants, would be allowed to apply for a waiver to receive more.

"They are actually quite a bit more restrictive than other states," said Morgan Fox, spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project, which has been lobbying for the legislation in Illinois. "While I think it is too restrictive in some ways, getting the law passed is going to be better than nothing."

Teri Robnett, who lives in Denver and has been a registered medical marijuana patient and activist for years, said she prefers buying marijuana and related products from dispensaries as opposed to growing her own, though Colorado law does allow up to six plants per patient.

Robnett, who said she has fibromyalgia, submits her doctor's recommendation to the state every year to have her identification renewed. She then uses that ID about every two weeks to stock up on concentrated cannabis oil known as Phoenix Tears, marijuana-infused brownies, cookies and granola bars and flower buds from the plant that can be smoked.

"It keeps my pain at bay," said Robnett, 53. "It's amazing to see people who never thought this was possible being able to walk into a dispensary, see different edibles and strains, make their choice, and then walk out the door with their bag in hand, not having to look over their shoulder."

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