Pubdate: Sun, 8 Mar 2009
Source: Long Beach Press-Telegram (CA)
Copyright: 2009 Los Angeles Newspaper Group
Contact:  http://www.presstelegram.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/244
Author: Tom Hennessy
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Marijuana - California)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?161 (Marijuana - Regulation)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Marijuana - Popular)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)

SEEING THE BENEFITS OF LEGALIZING WEED

It's an idea whose time has come, gone, and may now be returning.

Legalize marijuana.

Looking for a new revenue source, Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, D-San 
Francisco, last week introduced a bill to regulate the cultivation of 
pot and tax its sale.

Despite its illegality, marijuana is said to be the state's largest 
cash crop ($14billion), ahead of vegetables ($5.9billion) and grapes 
($2.6billion).

Tax collectors estimate that Ammiano's proposal would produce $1.3 
billion in new tax revenue for Sacramento.  Some experts, however, 
doubt the accuracy of that figure. Because legalizing marijuana will 
reduce its value, they say the $1.3 billion figure may be inflated.

Still, Ammiano's proposal could promise savings to taxpayers in other 
areas. Decriminalizing marijuana, for example, will lower the cost of 
law enforcement, now estimated to be about $170 million a year in the state.

Critical Overcrowding

With incarceration of marijuana offenders costing taxpayers an 
estimated $40,000 a year per inmate, legalization would also reduce 
prison costs. California has about 1,500 prisoners serving time for 
marijuana offenses. That's 10 times as many as in 1980, says Dale 
Gieringer, director of California NORML, an organization aimed at 
reforming marijuana laws.

But with the state's prison population having reached levels that may 
be unconstitutional, three federal judges said last month that as 
much as 40percent of prisoners may eventually have to be released.

Gieringer also offers this consideration, "Marijuana is reported to 
account for 61 percent of the illicit drug traffic from Mexico, where 
prohibition-related violence has killed over 6,800."

Legalization will not come easily. Of all the obstacles it faces, the 
federal government may be the most formidable. It has opposed pot use 
for decades, even in the 13 states whose laws allow sales of 
marijuana for medical purposes.

But there are signs that enforcement attitudes are changing, at least 
in the area of medical marijuana sales.

Attorney General Eric Holder is said to oppose further raids on those 
dispensing medical marijuana. And looming in the background is a 
campaign promise made by Barack Obama during his run for president: 
"I would not have the Justice Department prosecuting and raiding 
medical marijuana users."

Asked about this after the inauguration, Holder noted, "What he said 
during the campaign is now American policy."

Approving medical marijuana is no guarantee that all pot will be made 
legal by the feds. But many see it as a possible step in that 
direction. Officials of the Drug Enforcement Administration, usually 
quick to condemn traffic in pot, have been declining to comment of late.

On the federal level, a bill similar to Ammiano's has been introduced 
by Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass.

Interests that are to oppose legalization of marijuana include drug 
companies, the California prison guards union and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Flip-Flop Confession

I was once personally opposed to legalizing pot, but my opinion 
changed after meeting James P. Gray, now a retired Superior Court 
judge in Orange County. Gray was present last week at Ammiano's press 
conference and had this to say:

"I served 25 years on the bench and I've seen the results of this 
attempted prohibition. It doesn't make marijuana less available, but 
it does clog the court system. The stronger we get on marijuana, the 
softer we get with regard to all other prosecutions because we have 
only so many resources."

He also told those in the audience, "You and I as adults can go home 
tonight and drink 10 martinis. It's not a healthy thing to do but 
it's not illegal."

Which brings to mind Ammiano's answer when Slate, the online 
magazine, asked if he smokes marijuana. "I certainly experimented," 
he said. "But I'm more of a martini guy."

Let the debate on legalizing begin.

Again. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake