Pubdate: Wed, 11 Nov 2009
Source: Palm Beach Post, The (FL)
Copyright: 2009 The Palm Beach Post
Contact:  http://www.palmbeachpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/333
Author: Joel Engelhardt
Note: Joel Engelhardt is an editorial writer for The Palm  Beach Post.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

AN ECONOMY GONE TO POT

In Florida, Palm Beach County Commissioner Burt  Aaronson's generation
is known for golf course  communities, early-bird specials and
impossibly strict  homeowners association rules. After winning World
War  II and leading the postwar boom, America's Greatest  Generation
flocked to South Florida for sand, sea and  sun.

Smoking pot by the shuffleboard courts never entered  the picture.
That's why it's surprising that  Commissioner Aaronson has taken a
public stand in favor  of legalizing marijuana. Commissioner Jeff
Koons --  whose sister, Deborah, married the late Grateful Dead
guitarist Jerry Garcia -- maybe. But the 81-year-old  Aaronson?

In fact, coming from the parental side of the '60s  Generation Gap,
Commissioner Aaronson is suited to the  role of pied (water) piper. No
one ever won a bet  accusing Burt Aaronson of inhaling.

In the age of easily accessible medical marijuana and
decriminalization, Commissioner Aaronson made his case  on the basis
of cold, hard cash. Palm Beach County, he  said, pays too much to lock
up nonviolent offenders.  His cost-cutting is driven by the
realization that even  if the county had the money for its $267
million jail  expansion, it wouldn't have the money to guard all
those extra inmates.

The commissioner long has urged the courts to assign  more inmates to
house arrest, saving millions in jail  costs. From there, it's not too
far-out to suggest  decriminalization. Forget about pot as a gateway
drug  or health hazard. Think of its street value in fewer  arrests,
fewer trials and fewer lockups.

Commissioner Aaronson's thinking, however, is  small-minded. There's a
changing of the guard in  America. Now the generation of sex, drugs
and rock 'n'  roll is retiring. Palm Beach County's Leisureville is
no longer the first choice of Yuppies and ex-Yippies.  If Commissioner
Aaronson wants to assure a spot for  himself in county lore, the
commissioner known for  ruling the condo commandos has to take a much
bigger  hit off the bong.

Already, Florida is losing Baby Boomers to more rugged  locales, such
as North Carolina. But if gated  communities were to plow under
browning golf courses to  turn plush greens into lush buds, it would
give a whole  new meaning to the name Sunny Acres. Forget Century
Village. If we go with Burt "The Dude" Aaronson, we'd  have Sinsemilla
City.

Baby Boomers would be hitting the restaurants for the  early bird and 
staying on through the night. Homeowners  association rules would move from 
regulating the size  of pets to establishing penalties for bogarting 
joints.  Instead of calling the county "The Best of Everything,"  tourism 
officials could roll out a new slogan: "Palm  Beach County: A Great Joint."

If cultivation comes out of the closet, owners of the  county's vast
agricultural lands, with the rich soil  and hot climate, could cash
in. Disputes over  development of the 700,000-acre Everglades
Agricultural  Area, now mostly sugar cane fields, would take on a
psychadelic hue. Why stop with existing farmland? Hemp  farmers could
convert abandoned subdivisions back to  the land.

The move could be transcendental when it comes to  transforming the
South Florida of Commissioner  Aaronson's generation to the South
Florida of the Baby  Boomers. And Commissioner Aaronson is
particularly  well-situated to bring it all about. Next week, he
takes over as county commission chairman. In that role,  when he talks
about legalizing marijuana, he won't just  be blowing smoke.

Who would have thought that, after all these years, the  '60s
Generation Gap finally would be bridged by an  octogenarian
commissioner intent on saving money? It's  a blending of the
capitalism of the World War II  generation with the lifestyle of the
'60s  counterculture. Commissioner Aaronson's peace offering  to the
peaceniks could alter the consciousness of Palm  Beach County.

Joel Engelhardt is an editorial writer for The Palm  Beach Post. 
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D