Pubdate: Fri, 14 Jan 2005
Source: Austin Chronicle (TX)
Copyright: 2005 Austin Chronicle Corp.
Contact:  http://www.auschron.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/33
Author: Jordan Smith
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing)

WEED WATCH

At their annual meeting in Philadelphia in December, the National Black 
Caucus of State Legislators passed a resolution condemning the war on drugs 
and supporting legislation repealing mandatory minimums and diverting 
nonviolent drug offenders into treatment programs.

The resolution calls for legislation that includes "quantifiable and 
measurable goals" and "a drug policy agenda that prioritizes a public 
health, not a criminal justice approach, to drug policy. ... The war on 
drugs has failed, and while states have continually increased their 
expenditures to wage the war on drugs, policies which rely heavily on 
arrest and incarceration, have proven costly and ineffective at addressing 
these issues."

Among the members in attendance was state Rep. Harold Dutton, D-Houston, 
who said he wholeheartedly supports the NBCSL resolution, and has already 
heeded the groups call. Indeed, Dutton has already filed one bill (HB 254), 
which would decriminalize possession of small amounts of marijuana and 
downgrade sentences for possession of larger amounts. (Dutton filed a 
similar bill last session which languished in committee, but only after a 
public hearing where former Dallas Cowboy Mark Stepnoski head of the Texas 
chapter of NORML testified in favor of the measure before a rapt audience 
of apparent legislator fans.) Dutton said the state spends too much money 
and resources to punish low-level drug offenders.

If a person has a drug habit, you're never going to make it go away by 
putting them in jail, he said. Lets never make the cure worse than the disease.

In other positive news, the FDA last week approved a pilot study to 
determine whether the psychedelic drug Ecstasy can help terminally ill 
patients suffering with "end-of-life" anxiety and depression, reports the 
Drug Reform Coordination Network. Pending final approval by the Drug 
Enforcement Administration (which has say-so over possession and use of all 
Schedule I drugs), the study, led by Harvard Medical School researcher Dr. 
John Halpern, will begin in the spring with 12 cancer patients in the 
Boston area. Halpern calls Ecstasy an "empathogen," which can reduce stress 
and increase empathy in users.

Halpern's is the second Ecstasy study to receive FDA approval in recent 
months -- ending years of prohibition in the wake of the psychedelic 
studies conducted by another Harvard researcher, Timothy Leary. In 
December, the FDA also approved a South Carolina study that is testing the 
use of Ecstasy in treating post-traumatic stress disorder. Halpern's study 
will be funded with a $250,000 grant from the Florida-based 
Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies.

Back to school means back to drug detection for the Dallas ISD, which has 
signed a nearly $50,000 contract with a Louisiana company to conduct "trace 
scanner" sweeps to detect the presence of drugs at 47 middle and high 
schools. The freshly inked contract means DISD will be the first large 
school district in the country to use scanners to ferret out trace amounts 
of drugs on campus.

The scanners pick up microscopic traces of substances and are commonly used 
in airports to detect bomb-making materials.

DISD officials did preliminary scans last year in selected schools and 
found traces of heroin-laced marijuana and evidence of a so-called "love 
nest" in a school stairwell where students snorted coke, reports the 
Houston Chronicle. "They weren't the results we were looking for," DISD 
spokesman Donald Claxton told the daily.

The suburban Red Oak school district hired the same company, Trace 
Detection Services, to scan 1,500 high school students two years ago, in 
response to school officials' fears that two campuses were "awash in 
cocaine." Officials scanned lockers and school-issued ID cards, which "are 
school property, so they could be examined without invading students' 
privacy," Red Oak district police Chief Scott Lindsey told the paper.

Instead of a sea of coke, officials mostly found traces of marijuana -- on 
only 5% of students.

The results were a "relief" Lindsey said, and district officials are 
planning a second scan.
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