Posted On: 02/20/2014 1:10:49 PM
Post# of 36728
Re: AmericanSavage #24687
Not sure, but found this from a couple of years ago. Seems like the UC's were already loosening up a bit, even back then ...
http://blogs.sfweekly.com/thesnitch/2012/02/c...ijuana.php
In the Rocky Mountain state, at least, university officials allowed a freshman who wanted to use medical marijuana to be released from the requirement that he live on campus. A similar attitude may be found at the University of California system, according to Jerlena Griffin-Desta, director of student services for the 10-campus UC system.
While the UC "would never implement a policy going against a federal law," a UC student desiring to use medical marijuana might find him or herself "accommodated," Griffin-Desta said.
"If a student has demonstrated through documentation that this is something they must have, the university will work with the student to find reasonable accommodations," she said. For example, a student could be released from a housing contract without incurring further penalties. Or the university might even help them find somewhere else to live. And as for the student wishing to medicate discretely using edibles, sprays, or tinctures, "we don't monitor what students eat anyway," Griffin-Desta told SF Weekly .
http://blogs.sfweekly.com/thesnitch/2012/02/c...ijuana.php
In the Rocky Mountain state, at least, university officials allowed a freshman who wanted to use medical marijuana to be released from the requirement that he live on campus. A similar attitude may be found at the University of California system, according to Jerlena Griffin-Desta, director of student services for the 10-campus UC system.
While the UC "would never implement a policy going against a federal law," a UC student desiring to use medical marijuana might find him or herself "accommodated," Griffin-Desta said.
"If a student has demonstrated through documentation that this is something they must have, the university will work with the student to find reasonable accommodations," she said. For example, a student could be released from a housing contract without incurring further penalties. Or the university might even help them find somewhere else to live. And as for the student wishing to medicate discretely using edibles, sprays, or tinctures, "we don't monitor what students eat anyway," Griffin-Desta told SF Weekly .
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