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Data Quality Act Petition: 'I'm not dead yet.'
Quick primer for the newbies: The Data Quality Act was a regulation put into effect requiring government
agencies to disseminate accurate and truthful information (really!), allowing
groups or individuals to challenge that information, and requiring the
agencies to respond in 60 days. Well, Americans for Safe Access (ASA) decided to put that to the test. Health
and Human Services had a lot of inaccurate information (OK, lies) about
medical marijuana on their website and other materials. If corrected to the
real truth about the medical validity of marijuana, it would actually make it
much harder for the federal government to deny marijuana re-scheduling
appeals (ie, if HHS has the truth on their website, then the DEA can't point
to HHS and say "see, there's no accepted medical use for cannabis - HHS
says so"). So the petition went forward...
and now... ASA has filed an appeal in the 9th Circuit Court. This is from their opening
brief. The primary issue on appeal is whether the
"Information Quality Act" ... ("IQA," also referred to as
the Data Quality Act)... gave ASA a legal right to obtain a timely, substantive
response to its IQA Petition, or whether, as the district court held, the IQA
is merely horatory and that Congress intended to allow agencies to obey the
IQA's commands, or not, as they choose, free from all judicial review. Good luck, ASA! I admire your
perseverance. One of the standard tactics of
the federal government is to delay, delay, delay hoping you'll tire or die
before they have to do anything. Of course, it would be foolish
to depend only on the results of a drawn-out administrative procedure, but
hitting them from all sides -- that's powerful. So, pursuing the DQA, pushing
for re-scheduling, lobbying Congress, educating the people, correcting the
media, writing letters in newspapers, committing acts of civil disobedience,
demanding scientific truth, writing a blog -- it all adds up to critical
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http://blogs.salon.com/0002762/2009/04/11.html#a3412