Pubdate: Thu, 17 Mar 2011
Source: Providence Journal, The (RI)
Copyright: 2011 The Providence Journal Company
Contact:  http://www.projo.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/352
Author: Philip Marcelo, Journal State House Bureau
Bookmark: http://www.drugsense.org/cms/geoview/n-us-ri (Rhode Island)

TALK RENEWS ON GOVERNING MARIJUANA

PROVIDENCE -- Two committees of the state House of Representatives 
took up a host of proposals on Wednesday seeking to regulate 
marijuana, bringing out medical-marijuana patients, university 
students and former and current law-enforcement officers.

Supporters of a bill to legalize and tax the drug, including a 
handful of former and retired police officers, argued that the 
proposed law would make the state safer by allowing the police to 
focus on major crimes rather than marijuana offenses, while also 
helping the state dig out of its financial troubles by providing 
additional tax revenue.

State Attorney General Peter F. Kilmartin's office and the Rhode 
Island Police Chiefs' Association spoke in opposition to a bill to 
decriminalize possession of small amounts of marijuana, arguing that 
the proposed law would send a "mixed message" to youths about the 
risks associated with marijuana.

And local medical-marijuana users came out against still another 
proposal that would tax the so-called "compassion centers" that will 
be licensed and regulated by the state to grow and sell marijuana.

Ellen Smith, a North Scituate resident who has been using medical 
marijuana for about four years, said the tax would unfairly single 
out marijuana patients, as other prescription medication users are 
not currently taxed. "I don't understand how that is fair," Smith said.

Consideration of the bills comes close on the heels of two 
significant developments in a state-sanctioned medical-marijuana industry.

Last week, Governor Chafee proposed a new surcharge and tax on 
medical-marijuana sales as part of his first state budget. On 
Tuesday, the state Department of Health announced the first three 
recipients of state licenses to open compassion centers.

Rep. Edith H. Ajello, D-Providence, said she again introduced a bill 
to legalize, regulate and tax marijuana because she believed it would 
"do wonders" by improving the state's budget situation while "taking 
the criminal element" out of the marijuana supply-and-demand chain. 
"We are moving towards [marijuana's] broad acceptance," Ajello said 
in a hearing before the House Finance Committee.

Rep. Rene Menard, D-Lincoln, said he introduced legislation to tax 
compassion centers because he viewed them as a potentially lucrative 
industry that should help generate revenue for the state. (Menard 
says his bill differs from Governor Chafee's proposal because it 
would only tax centers that generate more than $500,000 in revenue, 
whereas Chafee's plan would tax all centers.)

Rep. John G. Edwards, D-Tiverton, said he again introduced a bill 
that would make possession of up to one ounce of marijuana a civil 
offense subject to a $150 fine to remove the "stigma associated with 
criminal arrest" that prevents many Rhode Islanders from attaining 
good-paying jobs, or even volunteering in some places.

He noted that at least a dozen other states have similar laws on 
their books, including Massachusetts. "Two years ago, they did this 
and the state has not imploded," Edwards said at a House Judiciary 
Committee hearing.

But Rep. Jon Brien, a Woonsocket Democrat who is a member of the 
House Judiciary Committee, voiced concern that the proposed 
legislation would only make the state's marijuana policy more convoluted.

"The perception that marijuana is a harmless drug is absurd to say 
the least," said Central Falls Police Chief Joseph P. Moran III, 
speaking on behalf of the Police Chiefs' Association.

Four other marijuana-related bills, all submitted by Rep. Roberto 
DaSilva, D-East Providence, were also under consideration Wednesday 
night in the House Judiciary Committee. No action was expected to be 
taken on those or any of the other bills.  
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake