Pubdate: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 Source: Manawatu Evening Standard (New Zealand) Copyright: 2000, Independent Newspapers Limited Fax: +64 6 350 9836 Address: 57-64 The Square, PO Box 3, Palmerston North, Manawatu, New Zealand SMITH PUSHES ANTI CANNABIS PETITION National's Education Spokesman Nick Smith paid a flying visit to Palmerston North on Thursday afternoon to promote a petition opposing the decriminalisation of cannabis. The Government has agreed the matter of the decriminalisation of cannabis should be reviewed by the health select committee, possibly this year. Dr Smith visited both Queen Elizabeth College and Freyberg High School yesterday to speak to the acting principals about the petition. The petition was organised by the School Trustees Association and has the support of the National Party who are promoting it. It asks the Government to abandon any move to decriminalise cannabis because of the effects on young people's educational achievement. The petition asks that the Government instead concentrate on increasing the effectiveness of education programmes, treatment for users and support for families. Dr Smith said he was visiting both Queen Elizabeth College and Freyberg High School because the principals and boards of trustees had a good reputation for keeping their schools drug free. However, he said the recent discussion about decriminalisation was causing confusion in young people with some thinking cannabis was already decriminalised. This confusion was making the jobs of the principals, teachers, and trustees at schools like Queen Elizabeth College and Freyberg High School more difficult, he said. Dr Smith said that the petition aimed to get support from three different sectors of the community. He said the first sector was the Boards of Trustees as since Tomorrows Schools in 1989 schools were now businesses and, with board approval, the principal or chairperson could now sign a petition on behalf of the board. It was also hoped that teachers at schools would get behind the petition and sign it if it was placed in the staff room. Dr Smith said the third section was the parents as it was hoped that schools would distribute the petition to parents for them to sign. He said the main objective of the petition was to galvanise every community in New Zealand and stop decriminalisation in it's tracks. "The evidence overwhelmingly shows that cannabis destroys young people's vitality, ambition and capacity to learn. With the Greens holding the balance of power in parliament, our worry is that cannabis decriminalisation will become a negotiating chip in a political game in which young people will be the losers". - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk