Pubdate: Thu, 21 Oct 2010
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Copyright: 2010 The Globe and Mail Company
Contact:  http://www.theglobeandmail.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168
Author: Joanna Slater, Los Angeles
Cited: Proposition 19 http://yeson19.com/
Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/find?272 (Proposition 19)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?253 (Cannabis - Medicinal - U.S.)

CALIFORNIA CONSIDERS A TRUCE IN THE WAR ON POT

Early last year, David Meiler was a student at a community college in 
Buffalo, seeing only dead ends in the grim economy of upstate New 
York. So like many young people before him, he headed west, lured by 
a vision of a burgeoning industry. It wasn't software, or green 
technology, or show business. It was marijuana.

Thanks to a measure on November's ballot, California is surprisingly 
close to becoming the first U.S. state to legalize recreational use 
of the drug. Mr. Meiler, 22, is one of the volunteers devoting his 
days to the cause. Indifferent toward politics until now, he has made 
more than 20,000 calls to voters in the last two months.

"I had a chance to change things and I had to take it," he says. "I'm 
going to get a legal job in the cannabis industry and be able to 
provide for myself."

Long a laboratory of social change in the United States, California 
is cooking up something unusual. Voters will decide on a measure that 
would allow Californians to possess and grow small amounts of pot, 
while giving local governments the right to tax and regulate the 
marijuana business.

To its supporters, the measure - called Proposition 19 - is a way to 
correct long-running failures in drug policy and deliver revenue to 
cash-strapped cities. Its opponents say that's bunk, arguing the 
initiative would increase the number of impaired drivers on the road, 
produce a hodgepodge of local laws, and set the state on a collision 
course with federal authorities.

No candidate for statewide office is supporting the measure. Jerry 
Brown, the Democratic candidate for governor, has even suggested it's 
a question of productivity. "We've got to compete with China, and if 
everybody's stoned, how the hell are we going to make it?" he said this summer.

Yet judging from the polls, most Californians don't share that 
concern. Recent surveys - with one exception - show the "yes" forces 
in the lead, though much could change. Young voters are especially 
enthused. On Facebook, the "Yes on Prop 19" campaign has collected 
more than 200,000 well-wishers (Mr. Brown has 90,000).

Michael Howard, a 23-year-old native of Brooklyn, is another 
volunteer. His shirt is festooned with campaign buttons bearing 
slogans that range from the tongue-in-cheek ("Yes we cannabis") to 
the businesslike ("Yes on 19").

Earlier this year, Mr. Howard relocated to Los Angeles to study the 
finer points of pot growing. He hopes to start his own delivery 
business one day. "It's like computers," he says. "If you're not on 
the bandwagon early ."

A gentle, slender young man with dreadlocks, Mr. Howard says his 
devotion to the issue is personal and political. If the measure 
passes, "cops can focus on real crimes and stop locking up young 
kids, especially minorities," he says. Hanging from his neck is a 
card that allows him to access marijuana for medical purposes - 
another pioneering initiative passed by California in 1996 and 
adopted by 14 other states.

Mr. Howard has a stomach ailment that for years left him unable to 
eat early in the day. Smoking a little pot each morning solves that 
problem, he says, though he's still adjusting to the California way 
of doing things. For someone from New York, the sight of people 
walking out of marijuana clinics with little paper bags of weed is a 
bit "mind-boggling."

California's pot scene can be heady for outsiders. It's relatively 
easy for locals to get a prescription for medical marijuana. Sales at 
storefront dispensaries don't exactly feel clinical. One 
well-established outlet in Los Angeles has marijuana brownies, 
cookies and butter on offer, promotes discounts on certain days of 
the week, and hands out rewards for bringing in new "patient-members."

Earlier this year the city cracked down on hundreds of dispensaries 
that had flourished in a murky regulatory environment. The Los 
Angeles experience is cited as a cautionary tale, while proponents 
say places such as Oakland, near San Francisco, have done a better 
job of making the rules clear.

Oakland, with its pot-friendly city council, is the epicentre of the 
movement to legalize marijuana. Richard Lee, a local entrepreneur and 
activist, has spent more than $1-million of his own money on the 
campaign. He is the founder of Oaksterdam University, an organization 
offering classes on topics from advanced pot growing to the history 
of cannabis.

With just two weeks left until the election, anything could happen. 
Proposition 19's opponents say they will hold press conferences 
throughout the state where police officers and prosecutors explain 
why they think the measure is dangerous. "We're the ones who are 
going to have to deal with the consequences should this horrible 
measure pass," says Kim Raney of the California Police Chiefs Association.

Mr. Raney notes that regardless of what happens on Nov. 2, marijuana 
will remain illegal under federal law. U.S. authorities have taken a 
hands-off approach to medical marijuana, effectively giving it the 
green light so long as state laws are being followed.

But the Justice Department said recently it would "vigorously 
enforce" federal drug laws against the recreational use of marijuana, 
even if California allows it. How exactly federal authorities would 
do that is unclear, since the vast majority of marijuana arrests take 
place at the local level.

Indeed, much about the brave world of legalized marijuana remains in 
the realm of speculation. Academics foresee a drastic fall in the 
price of the drug in California, which would deal a blow to criminal 
cartels. Supporters see the potential for $1.4-billion in new revenue 
for the state from taxes and fees. Opponents warn that each of the 
state's hundreds of cities will create different rules surrounding 
the drug's use.

Hanna Liebman Dershowitz, a petite 41-year old lawyer in Los Angeles 
who is working on the Yes campaign, is one of those who believe "the 
sky is not going to fall" if the proposition passes.

A mother of two young children, she is more worried about her kids 
making responsible choices about eating sugar and driving a car than 
she is about marijuana. She took her five-year-old to three birthday 
parties on a recent weekend and at each one she sought out parents to convince.

It's time to discard "a mistaken policy of generations past," she 
says. "I like to say I'm cautiously pessimistic, but I'm really 
starting to believe that it could happen." 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake