Pubdate: Wed, 15 Dec 2010
Source: Denver Daily News (CO)
Copyright: 2010 Denver Daily News
Contact:  http://www.thedenverdailynews.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4274
Note: Denver Daily News staff report

MMJ CENTERS CAUSED DRUG SPIKE?

Youth Allegedly Doing More Drugs; Pro-Pot Groups Blame Failed Drug Policies

Republican state Attorney General John Suthers yesterday said a recent
national report suggests that increased accessibility and
acceptability of marijuana -- such as medical marijuana centers in
Colorado -- is to blame for a rise in drug use among youth.

But marijuana advocates say critics are making excuses for a failed
war on drugs.

The National Institute on Drug Abuse report attributes the 1.5 percent
increase in drug use among 8th-graders to increased marijuana use. The
percentage of 8th-graders using drugs rose to 16 percent from 14.5
percent the previous year.

"These increases in youth drug use are being fueled by the increasing
accessibility and acceptability of marijuana use," Suthers said in a
statement. "Marijuana use can have grave detrimental effects on the
developing minds and behavior of teens. This report highlights one of
the side effects of the increasing social acceptance of medical
marijuana and the ramifications of its widespread use."

Medical marijuana is legal in Colorado, approved by voters and put
into the state constitution.

Over the past year-and-a-half, there has been a spike in medical
marijuana centers across Colorado, with there being nearly double the
number of MMJ centers to Starbucks. Over the past year-and-a-half, the
number of MMJ centers jumped from just over a dozen to over 1,000.

The Legislature this year crafted some of the toughest medical
marijuana regulations in the nation, cracking down hard on both MMJ
centers and patients, with a seemingly endless list of regulations,
dealing with everything from cultivation to tax and fee requirements.
Lawmakers even imposed a one-year moratorium on new MMJ centers.

The Legislature is expected to draft more tough regulations this year,
with a heavy focus placed on doctors who make medical marijuana
recommendations.

A recent Colorado Department of Education report on safety and
discipline suggests a similar trend among youth drug use here in
Colorado, with the number of drug incidents reported by school
districts in Colorado rising 34 percent from 2008-09 to 2009-10.

"Increased marijuana use among youth has serious ramifications for the
education of our children and numerous other important issues that
could compromise Colorado's future," Suthers said. "Although the
Legislature has chosen to legitimize dispensaries beyond what the
voters approved in 2000, I would encourage policymakers to continue to
consider and, if necessary, revisit this issue as more and more data
reveals the effects of marijuana proliferation and use."

But Mason Tvert, of the pro-marijuana advocacy group Safer Alternative
for Enjoyable Recreation (SAFER), says failed drug policies are to
blame for the continuing increase in youth drug use. He says there is
much less risk surrounding marijuana than alcohol. Tvert believes more
youth smoking pot suggests progress.

"We would all like teens to remain drug free," said Tvert. "But if
they are going to use an intoxicating substance, they pose far less
harm to themselves and to others if they choose to use marijuana
instead of alcohol."

"Alcohol contributes to overdose deaths, significant long-term health
problems, serious injuries, and violent crimes, whereas marijuana has
never been found to contribute to such problems," Tvert added. "Teens
choosing to use marijuana instead of alcohol are in fact making a
safer choice." 
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