Facebook Connect
This Week's SFR Picks
 
Best of Santa Fe 2012 Vote NOW

SFR's Best of Santa Fe Voting
SFReporter Subscription
Sign Up for SFR:
Email Newsletter

Weekly Poll

What do you think of SFR´s new cover design?

 

 

 

 

 

Discuss Vote   

Getting poll results. Please wait...
— Catch-19?
NM’s decision to review its gun policies has advocates up in arms
— All Business
Tanti Luce 221 is about more than just food--and that's a good thing
— Under the Wire
Blue Cross Blue Shield pushes for yet another rate hike—its seventh in eight years—before new financial transparency rules kick in
— Bus-ted
For years, local officials used a Texas price agreement to green-light bus purchases. Now they’ve stopped—but the same out-of-state bus company still dominates the market
— Making Enemies
Public Enemy is coming, but can you attend?

 

 
SFReeper 12.02.2011 0 Comments
 
 

Final Medical Cannabis Program staffer resigns

All three of the program's permanent staffers have now resigned within the past six weeks.

By Joey Peters
Medical-Marijuana

 And three's a charm. Andrea Alano, who works staff in the state's Medical Cannabis Program, submitted her resignation this week, confirms Department of Health spokeswoman Aimee Barabe.

Alano follows the footsteps of former program czar Dominick Zurlo and former program coordinator Donna Armijo, who also recently resigned. Her move also means all three of the program's administrators have resigned from the program within a six-week period. Both Zurlo and Armijo officially left at the end of November. 

The program, which prescribes medical marijuana to patients who meet one of 16 conditions, has dealt with its share of difficulties this year. In the spring, many complained that supply wasn't adequate enough to meet patient needs. By fall, several patients were waiting far longer than the state-regulated maximum of 30 days to receive a renewal of their medical marijuana licenses. 

The DOH responded by hiring five temporary employees to address the backlog. The agency has promised to make the temporary positions permanent.

Butch Catanach is temporarily in charge of the program, Barabe says. She anticipates the DOH will start actively looking for a permanent replacement for Zurlo next week. 

Although the DOH doesn't comment on personnel matters, many speculate the resignations have to do with the current administration's neglect toward the program. In fall of 2010, the soon-to-be-Gov. Susana Martinez often expressed her opposition to the program for putting state employees at the risk of violating federal law, which recognizes marijuana as an illegal substance.


 
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
 
 
 
Close
Close
Close