KEEP UP ON DENVER NEWS AT WESTWORD.COM/NEWS NEWS Med Alert SOME SCHOOLS WON’T ADMINISTER MMJ TO STUDENT PATIENTS DESPITE STATE MANDATE. BY JESSICA GIBBS Melissa Durham moved to Cascade, Colo- rado, from Texas in 2016 in hopes of fi nding medical marijuana treatments for her son, Austin, whose conditions include cerebral palsy and seizures. Struggling with pharmaceutical seizure medication at the time, Austin partially tran- sitioned to medical marijuana. He now uses a form of extracted THC oil, which he takes every day at 1 p.m., as well as CBD oil to treat seizures. Durham says the cannabis-based medication led to noticeable cognitive and behavioral improvements, while also con- trolling her son’s seizures. “It’s been life-changing for my kiddo,” she 6 says. “He communicates with us, which is something he never did before.” But during the past school year, Durham had to drive to Austin’s school each day to administer his marijuana mediation, and she’ll probably have to do it again next year. Policy in her son’s school district, District 14 in Manitou Springs, still prohibits employ- ees from administering medical marijuana to students. Medical marijuana cannot be stored at schools in the district, either, so Austin can’t use a THC-based nasal spray during emergency seizure episodes when Durham isn’t there; he instead uses a phar- maceutical rescue medication at school. Durham has advocated at board meet- ings to allow school staff to administer her son’s medicine, but to no avail. “Nobody was really on board with changing the school policies,” she says. District 14 is one of dozens of Colorado public school districts that either still ban or haven’t yet addressed medical marijuana poli- cies, despite legislative measures mandating that school districts give employees the right to administer the medication to students who are registered patients. Although medical marijuana has been legal for over twenty years in Colorado and children’s medical marijuana medications are ingested, not smoked, access for young patients has been slow in schools. The fi rst law addressing the issue wasn’t passed until 2016. Known as “Jack’s Law” in honor of now-deceased child patient Jack Splitt, the law allowed students who use medical marijuana to take their medication at school, but only if the child’s caregiver was there to administer it. Although Jack’s Law gave students access to their medicine at school, families of students who use medical marijuana say it still places a bur- den on caregivers, which are roles usually fi lled by the student’s parents. A state legislative measure in 2018 updated Colorado law so that school personnel could also administer medical marijuana if a school dis- trict adopted such policies. One of the fi rst districts to allow employees to admin- ister medical marijuana was Clear Creek School District in Clear Creek County, but it took a hand- ful of parents and medi- cal marijuana advocates to lobby the school board fi rst. Lisa (who asked that we not use her last name out of fear of professional or legal re- percussions) has a sixteen-year-old son with autism in Clear Creek County schools. Suffer- ing from liver imbalance and weight gain after taking pharmaceuticals, he began using a form of medical marijuana about three years ago. “It really was another missing piece in the whole puzzle,” she says. But Lisa didn’t have the availability to go to school to give him his medication, and staff couldn’t administer it under previous district policy at the time. “It was harder for him to get through the day,” his mother recalls. Clear Creek’s school board was open to updating the policy after the 2018 law change, however, and staff was allowed to ad- minister her son’s daily medication by 2019. According to Lisa, her son is now surpassing expectations: His relationships and grades have improved, and he plays sports. It’s a far cry from years ago, she remembers, when she was told her son was likely to become institutionalized at some point. Numerous districts have followed Clear Melissa Durham moved to Colorado with her son for medical marijuana. ing medical marijuana, but a concern over that possibility is no longer suffi cient to opt against implementing a new medical marijuana policy, per SB 056. But while the new law requires school districts to update their medical marijuana policies, it doesn’t have a deadline for imple- mentation, nor did it create a penalty for districts that haven’t done so. Child patient advocates, public offi cials and educational organizations are not aware of a comprehensive list of school districts with updated policies. The Colorado De- partment of Education isn’t tracking if or how the law is being enacted in Colorado schools, according to a spokesperson, who notes that the legislation applies to school districts and not the state. In Manitou Springs School District 14, Creek’s lead, but a large portion of the state’s 178 public school districts continue to ab- stain. Westword has discovered 45 districts with new policies allowing staff to volun- tarily administer medical marijuana, while nearly 70 districts have policies still prohibit- ing such actions. Policies for the remaining districts are either not readily accessible online or do not explicitly address staff ad- ministration of medical marijuana. Senate Bill 21-056, passed in 2021, was supposed to eliminate roadblocks by requir- ing public school district policies to allow personnel to volunteer and administer mari- juana medication; it also created protocols establishing on-site storage of non-smokeable medical marijuana, and protects staff from employer retaliation if they volunteer or decline to administer the medication. Since 2018, districts have commonly cited fears of losing federal funding when asked why they prohibit staff from administer- where Durham’s son attends school, the current school board “has discussed the topic,” according to superintendent Eliza- beth Domangue, and could review it as early as March of 2023. However, school board president Tina Vidovich says there are no plans to change the policy. Vidovich says the school board consults hired counsel and the Colorado Association of School Boards (CASB) before implement- ing new policy, and doesn’t believe the dis- trict is breaking state laws by not allowing employees to administer medical marijuana. A state and federal lobbying organiza- tion that counts nearly every public school district as members, CASB doesn’t track individual policies in school districts or provide legal advice to members, according to spokesman Bryce Reedy. But CASB does provide “sample policy and informational re- sources,” he points out, both of which “align with the requirements established by state law, including those added by SB21-056.” However, in 2019 CASB also issued a memo to school boards to “make sure districts know they’re faced with risks when school personnel administer medical marijuana to a student,” according to the organization. When reached by phone, Domangue and Vidovich declined to discuss concerns they have with allowing staff to administer medical marijuana. In response to additional emailed ques- tions, including whether the district has a legal exemption from allowing staff to voluntarily admin- ister medical marijuana, Domangue provided the following statement: “Each policy decision impacts students, staff, and families in different ways. The Board of Educa- tion and I consider impact each time a policy is reviewed or added. In this case, we do receive federal funds and like many school districts have determined at this point that caregivers may administer a student’s medical cannabis.” Domangue did not include which federal funds she was referring to, or whether the district could demonstrate that it would lose funding by allowing staff to administer medical marijuana. At least one school district, Colorado Springs School District 11, has a policy online stating that the federal government asked the district to suspend its policy allowing for the administration of medical marijuana in 2020. Former Colorado senator Chris Hol- bert, who introduced SB 056, declined to be interviewed. Senator Julie Gonzales, a sponsor of the bill, says she has not tracked the law’s implementation across school districts, but was surprised to hear some districts “are being this reticent” about medical marijuana policies. “That seems pretty concerning to me,” Gonzales says. Any school district that does not allow the storage of medical marijuana or personnel to administer it “should be prepared to demon- strate what funds they would stand to lose, and whether or not that has been raised as an issue by the federal government,” she says, adding that she would “follow up with the appropriate agencies who oversee these policies.” Until then, parents like Durham will continue spending time in their cars or at schools. According to Durham, this affects more than her free time: She hasn’t been able to get a job since she began administering Austin’s medication at school, and is aware of how hard it can be for teenagers to have their moms around them at school so often. “It would be amazing, and I would love for them to change the school policy to allow school personnel to give him his medica- tion,” she says. “Maybe it can pave the way for future students that come up in the district.” Email the author at [email protected]. JULY 28-AUGUST 3, 2022 WESTWORD | MUSIC | CAFE | CULTURE | NIGHT+DAY | NEWS | LETTERS | CONTENTS | westword.com COURTESY MELISSA DURHAM