Lately there has been much debate about requiring poor people receiving government assistance to comply with all manner of restrictions on their freedom — from Florida Governor Rick Scott forcing welfare recipients to pee in a cup if they want to feed their kids to fans in our very own chat rooms discussing restricting Food Stamp recipients in which foods they can buy (“no steak!”). It’s as if some Americans believe once you get on the taxpayer’s dole, you surrender your right to make your own choices in life. As if the 14th Amendment doesn’t exist and depriving persons of liberty is all right so long as it’s poor people on welfare. (Rich people receiving government largess are exempt from the witch-hunt, of course.)
The latest restriction of poor people’s freedom is the government forcing them to choose between medical marijuana and homelessness. As reported by Willamette Week, poor people who need federal assistance for housing – known as “Section 8″ – will now be evicted if they use medical marijuana, even if they are registered in the Oregon Medical Marijuana Program.
Home Forward has started telling tenants of its 6,200 units that smoking medical marijuana in their residences could get them evicted, even if they had been given prior permission to do so. But they can use medical marijuana in other forms. The letter says the ban will start in November.
REACH has gone a step further, telling residents they cannot use medical marijuana in any form if their unit receives a federal subsidy or if they rely on a Section 8 housing voucher, also funded by a federal program.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, or HUD, sent a memo in January to organizations it subsidizes, says Donna White, national spokeswoman for the agency. In Oregon, those agencies run about 44,000 housing units, home to between 88,000 and 132,000 people.
In the memo, HUD leaves the decision to evict medical-marijuana users to housing providers, but it forbids them from granting “reasonable accommodation” for its use. Reasonable accommodation protects people with a disability from eviction—until now, that included anyone with a medical-marijuana card.
Ironically, the people who claim the mantle of outraged taxpayer for the waste of a Food Stamp on a steak don’t seem to realize that by forcing people on “Section 8″ housing to forgo medical marijuana, you increase the amount of prescription meds they must use. More meds that the taxpayers end up buying at grossly-inflated prices because Big Pharma’s lobby protected its profit by denying Medicare the ability to negotiate for bulk pricing. Or you get some of those people who can’t or won’t give up medical marijuana and eventually get caught and evicted. Yes, more homeless sick people, that’s just what the American taxpayer needs!









