Pubdate: Fri, 08 Apr 2005
Source: Anchorage Daily News (AK)
Copyright: 2005 The Anchorage Daily News
Contact:  http://www.adn.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/18
Author: Sean Cockerham
Cited: Alaskans For Marijuana Regulation and Control (
www.regulatemarijuanainalaska.org/home/ )
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

LAWMAKERS STAND FIRM AGAINST MARIJUANA

Bill: Alaskans Couldn't Light Up, Even In Privacy Of Their Own
Homes.

JUNEAU -- Last fall 44 percent of Alaska voters said they wanted all
amounts of pot to be legal for adults to use, grow, sell or give away.

They are not likely to find a single member of the Legislature who
agrees.

That's a key fact, since the Legislature is now considering Gov. Frank
Murkowski's push to again make it illegal for adults to use modest
amounts of marijuana in their own homes.

"I'd say I've got my work cut out for me to stop this bill," said Bill
Parker, a former Anchorage legislator who, on behalf of Alaskans for
Marijuana Regulation and Control, is opposing the governor's effort.

The governor's bill cleared the Senate Health, Education and Social
Services Committee last week with little opposition. The House
Judiciary Committee will begin hearings on it this morning.

Parker argued that, while the majority of Alaskans don't support
full-blown legalization, the fact that 44 percent do indicates
Murkowski is out of touch. And, he said, legislators fall back on
conventional political wisdom that the safest course is to declare
themselves against all drugs.

"The average politician's conclusion is that if you (even) talk about
drugs, then people will think that you are for drugs," Parker said.

Crucial elements of the debate, such as the right to privacy in the
home and the specific effects of pot, get lost, he said.

Anchorage Republican Rep. Norm Rokeberg said it's not about
politics.

"I disagree with those 44 percent, personally, and I believe the
proper public policy is to prohibit the possession and use of
marijuana," he said.

He said the majority of Alaskans spoke and said they wanted all
marijuana illegal.

In 1990 Alaska voters passed an initiative to criminalize the
possession of any amount of marijuana. The governor is trying defend
that initiative in the courts, Rokeberg said.

The Alaska Supreme Court in September let stand a lower court ruling
that adults have the right to possess less than four ounces of pot for
personal use in their own homes. The court ruled it is protected under
the strong right to privacy in the state constitution.

Murkowski hopes his bill will create a legislative record showing that
marijuana is harmful enough that the state's interest in banning it
should outweigh the constitutional right to privacy.

The bill would also make possession of more than four ounces of pot a
felony crime.

Callers testifying against the bill have reminded lawmakers that many
of their constituents favored all-out legalization in last fall's election.

One caller said legislators ought to heed the potential backlash from
those voters in their "political calculus" of whether to support the
bill.

"I look forward to telling my constituents why I support this bill,"
Fairbanks Republican Sen. Gary Wilken retorted. "That's my political
calculus."

Wilken, who represents a district in which 43 percent of voters
favored all-out legalization last fall, said he believes that
marijuana is damaging and even the use at home by adults should be
illegal.

Juneau Democratic Sen. Kim Elton was the only legislator on the Senate
health committee to argue against the governor's bill. Elton
represents a district in which 55 percent voted in favor of full
legalization.

Elton said he is "slightly out of step" with his constituents in that
he does not favor marijuana legalization. But he said he doesn't have
a problem with the courts' interpretation that adult at-home use of
modest amounts of marijuana is covered under the right to privacy.

Elton said he was worried that enforcement of the governor's anti-pot
bill would divert state dollars from what he called the bigger
problems of drunk driving and methamphetamine abuse.

Homer Republican Rep. Paul Seaton's district also narrowly favored pot
legalization. Seaton said he doesn't want legalization. But neither is
he enthusiastic about the governor's plan to crack down on pot.

"I think we've got a lot bigger problems to worry about," Seaton said. 
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