Yami Bolanos fights for legalization of medical marijuana

Imagine waiting months for a much-needed organ transplant, only to lay in bed, writhing in pain, for 4 years after the transplant is completed. Imagine that the medicines the doctors give you don’t work because you’re allergic to them, so you resort to laying there day-after-day, a prisoner in your own home, until the point that you don’t want to live anymore. Your body cannot keep up with the constant vomiting, shaking, pain, and swelling. Just imagine this situation and ask yourself, what other choice do you have?

This was the situation of Yami Bolanos. She had a liver transplant in 1996 and was in pain every day of her life for the following 4 years. Then, she found a way out. She was offered to smoke marijuana with a friend, and it was the first time in 4 years that she felt any relief from her symptoms. The marijuana didn’t take the pain away, but there was a comforting feeling that came after smoking. This experience started her interest in legalization, to help so many other suffering people around the world. I had the opportunity to interview Yami and find out about how she got to where she is today.

What initially stirred your interest in legalization? How did your activism get started?

Yami’s positive experience with marijuana, which brought back her life, is what stirred her interest in legalization. She told me,

“I was laying in bed at Stanford University, recovering from my liver transplant, when legalization passed. I never thought I would be the one embracing the law and fighting for further legislation. I am still standing today because of medical marijuana.”

Within 3 years of her positive experience with marijuana, she opened the 7th medical marijuana dispensary in Los Angeles. Then, in 2006, she established the Greater LA Collectives Alliance (GLACA), a trade organization based in LA. The Alliance went political when it begged the city for an ordinance to regulate and govern marijuana, which LA didn’t have at the time. However, instead of an ordinance, the city banned the organization in 2012. A year later, GLACA was able to collect enough signatures to get Proposition D – which protected previously operating dispensaries from being closed down.

The Alliance is now 10 years old, making it the oldest medical marijuana trade organization in the country. It currently umbrellas the only legal entities in the city. GLACA assists 187 LA dispensaries to operate within local and state law, informing them about policy changes. The Alliance also has a network of complaint dispensaries to ensure that patients have access to clean, high-quality medicine.

Where else has your interest in legalization taken you?

Yami works closely with an organization called Americans for Safe Access (ASA), a patient-based national organization that works to ensure safe and legal access to cannabis for therapeutic uses and research. ASA was founded in 2002 with the purpose of building a strong grassroots movement to protect patients and their rights to safe and legal access. It currently has goals of resolving federal and state conflict on medical cannabis laws, ensuring safe and legal access to medical cannabis throughout the nation, ending the stigma and discrimination associated with medical cannabis use and research, and regulating cannabis like an herbal medicine. The organization umbrellas two programs that are close to Yami’s heart: Peace for Patient Campaign and El Remedio.

The Peace for Patient Campaign was founded in 2013 after the death of Norman Smith, who was denied a liver transplant by Cedars-Sinai Medical Center because he had tested positive for medical marijuana. The campaign had the goal of ending the federal war on medical cannabis patients. In 2015, the Medical Cannabis Organ Transplant Act (AB258) was signed into law, prohibiting discrimination against medical cannabis patients in the organ transplant process.

Yami also works with El Remedio, an organization that educates the Latino community in California about using marijuana in medical, edible, cream, and oil forms. The organization teaches that these forms of marijuana can help cure cancer, limit pain, and bring back life. The Latino community has historically been stereotyped as marijuana smokers, and El Remedio is trying to move away from this, teaching the community positive ways to use marijuana.

Why do you feel so strongly about legalization? What issues do you believe are at stake?

Yami feels that legalization of marijuana will help patients that either don’t want or can’t use other forms of Western medicine. Like her, there are patients suffering every single day, and medical marijuana would help them get their lives back, too. It would allow for people to get safe, legal, and easy access to medical marijuana. Legalization would allow for education on the healthy uses of medical marijuana and the move away from smoking, which harms your lungs.

What are the social and economic impacts of legalizing cannabis?

Yami believes that legalization of medical cannabis is the best solution to the social and economic problems in the U.S. and elsewhere. It prevents overcrowding in jails and eliminates the finances needed to hold these non-violent “criminals” convicted of drug possession or sales. People won’t be punished for trying to do something good. Legalization would also bring many jobs to communities. Cannabis is the biggest money-making crop in California, why wouldn’t that be the same case other places? There is plenty of work to be done in the cannabis market, such as growing, cultivation, cleaning, and selling. It can employ a lot of people.


Yamileth Bolanos is the keynote speaker for the upcoming Latin American Medical Cannabis Conference in San Jose, July 28-29. There, she will present what initially started her interest in legalization, and help doctors, government officials, and business-people attending the event to get a real understanding of the many facets of this industry.

 

I am proud to be able to go back to Costa Rica and inform and educate the people there. There are a lot of liberties and freedoms in Costa Rica. People are finally opening up their minds. The politics have finally caught up to the science.

: PROMED, the Council for the International Promotion of Costa Rica Medicine will host the Latin America Medical Cannabis Conference in Costa Rican on July 27-29th as part of ExpoMed series. PROMED is a private not-for-profit organization, which coordinates the quality control and international promotion efforts of the medical tourism industry. Its goal is to ensure the quality of services provided by the private health industry in Costa Rica as the country becomes a major center for global medicine and medical tourism.

Limited space is available at the conference. More information and conference registration is available here.

The Cannabis Industry Association Costa Rica is not affiliated with any US or other organizations.

VIAThe Costa Rica News (TCRN)
SOURCETiana Jacobs
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