Amy Gurowitz says medical marijuana eases her daily pain and enables her to stand, walk and cope with the unpredictability that comes with a multiple sclerosis diagnosis.

The one side effect the 51-year-old Montclair woman said she doesn’t like is the stress she feels wondering how she’ll be able to afford her medicine every month.

Gurowitz has been able to tackle the problem creatively by selling her ceramics, an endeavor she calls “Pots for Pot.” She said she’s also grateful friends have contributed to her gofundme account. But she doesn’t know how long she can count on either strategy.

“I do have a feeling if it runs out soon, I will be without” cannabis, she said. “That’s just sad.”

With premium dried weed costing as much as $500 an ounce ever since the first dispensary opened seven years ago, Gurowitz’s worries are widely shared among the state program’s 58,000 participants, patient advocates say. As long as marijuana is illegal under federal law, no insurance company will cover it.

Now one state lawmaker said he’s working on legislation that would help minimize some of the financial burden.

State Sen. Joseph Vitale, D-Middlesex, said he’s drafting a bill that would enable state-funded programs to pick up some of the tab.

“Until the federal government gets its act together, we should be looking at what we can do” as a state," said Vitale, chairman of the Senate Health, Human Services and Senior Citizens Committee.

He’s examining whether the laws governing the State Health Benefits Program and the State Health Education Program could be changed to allow coverage of medicinal cannabis. The Catastrophic Illness in Children Relief Fund — which helps families in all income brackets defray the costs of care not covered by insurance — is another option, Vitale said.

The court decisions requiring the state Workers Compensation program to pay for medical expenses paves the way for a state-supported program, he said. (One case has been challenged and is pending before the state Supreme Court.)

CPA Stacey Udell of HBK Valuation in Cherry Hill said patients may also write-off some of the cannabis costs on their state tax returns — but only when these exceed 2% of their annual income, however.

Assistant Health Commissioner Jeff Brown, who oversees the state’s medicinal marijuana program, agrees the price remains a barrier for patients, especially those who do not qualify for the various discounts dispensaries offer to minors, veterans and low-income patients on public assistance programs.

“I’d like to see more discounts offered,” Brown said.

The department’s cost analysis in its latest biennial report found bud prices varied from $360 to $500 an ounce. There are seven retail dispensary locations operating across the state, serving a patient base of 58,000 that grows by about 2,000 a month.

Prices are depressing sales, according to the report. Patients on average are buying a half-ounce every month, far less than the 2-ounce limit allowed at the time, the report said.

“For a patient in New Jersey, buying an ounce of whole flower per month without a discount could cost as much as $6,000 per year,” according to the report.

Gov. Phil Murphy’s administration in December granted permits for six new grower and retailers to join the market, but none has opened shop yet, citing issues with acquiring local approvals and securing financial backing.

The health department is expected to announce a new round of winning applicants soon.

“The key there is increasing the supply and increasing competition,” Brown said. “That is why it is critical to get the new ATCs operational. We are working on it, but they are private businesses.”

A version of this story first appeared in NJ Cannabis Insider.

Susan K. Livio may be reached at slivio@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @SusanKLivio. Find NJ.com Politics on Facebook

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