Pubdate: Fri, 02 Nov 2012
Source: Daily Evergreen, The (Washington State U, WA Edu)
Copyright: 2012 WSU Student Publications Board
Contact:  http://www.dailyevergreen.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2843
Authors: Anna Marum and Sam Mello

I-502 A 'STICKY SITUATION' FOR COLLEGES

When a drug task force arrested an outspoken pro-marijuana student at 
WSU in 2011, it sent waves of fear through pot activists on campus.

Tyler Markwart, who had a prescription for the drug, said he was 
delivering marijuana to medical patients on campus and on the Palouse.

"I was producing and distributing high-quality medication at very low 
prices," said Markwart, who founded the nonprofit Allele Seeds 
Research Group and lobbied WSU leaders to begin growing the plant on 
campus for research. "But I wasn't just trying to set up a pot shop - 
I was trying to work gradually into it to see if I could get the 
support of the community behind me, so I started a delivery service."

But for Markwart and other college students with medical marijuana 
prescriptions, the intersection of college policy, state law and a 
federal ban has sown confusion.

At state universities, officials are trying to answer a tricky 
question: How can the university comply with federal law without 
interfering with the rights of patients who have a prescription for 
medical marijuana?

Even if an initiative to legalize marijuana passes in November, the 
drug likely won't be allowed on college campuses in Washington any 
time soon, according to university representatives across the state.

Initiative 502 would legalize the drug for medicinal and recreational 
uses, but a 1989 federal law would still ban marijuana on college 
campuses. Under the Drug-Free Schools and Communities Act of 1989, 
institutions that allow illegal drugs on campuses can be audited and 
lose federal funding.

"We can't do anything that would threaten federal funding," said 
Darin Watkins, WSU's spokesman.

At the University of Washington, the passage of I-502 is not likely 
to change the university's ban on marijuana, according to Norm 
Arkans, a spokesman for the university.

"We would comply with the law that governs where those dollars flow," 
Arkans said.

At WSU, all smoking - including cigarettes and slow-burning incense - 
is banned in residence halls. The university also prohibits marijuana 
use and possession on campus, even for those with medical 
prescriptions, Watkins said.

But Edwin Hamada, director of Residence Life at WSU, said the ban on 
marijuana is sometimes difficult to enforce in the dorms, especially 
when it comes to edibles, such as brownies baked with marijuana 
butter. This poses a conundrum for resident advisers, the primary 
enforcers of the policy in dorms. Unlike campus police, the advisers 
are students' peers.

"It's a sticky situation," he said. "They're not going to turn their 
back on policy, but also not going out of their way (to look for 
marijuana use)."

Markwart said he made several medical marijuana deliveries to 
patients on campus. Some of these patients lived in dorms and in 
campus housing, he said. In fact, Markwart said he used marijuana in 
the 21-and-older dorms as well.

" ... I used my vaporizer every day in my dorm room, with no problems 
from the RA, as they knew I was a medical patient," he wrote in a 
Facebook message to a reporter.

In August, a Whitman County Superior Court judge sentenced Tyler J. 
Markwart, 31, to 80 days in jail and a $10,000 fine for three counts 
of felony marijuana delivery. He plans to appeal the sentence.

Watkins said students are prohibited from using marijuana in dorms, 
but agreed the ban can be difficult to enforce.

However, the university tries to accommodate medical marijuana users: 
The university waives the first-year on-campus housing requirement 
for students with medical cards, Watkins said.

Mark Cooke, drug policy advocate for the American Civil Liberties 
Union (ACLU) of Washington, said conflicting marijuana laws and 
policy have perplexed patients, as well as officials enforcing the 
various laws and policies.

"The current law doesn't provide a lot of protection for patients," 
Cooke said. "There's a lot of confusion among the local government 
about how they should handle this issue. So it doesn't surprise me to 
hear that there's confusion at the college level as well."

Student advocates say they don't want to jeopardize federal funding 
for the university. However, Topsanna Littlestar, vice president of 
WSU's branch of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana 
Laws, or NORML, thinks the initiative - whether it passes or fails - 
might have relatively little impact on campus.

"There's a lot of people who smoke on campus anyway," she said. "They 
smoke in their dorms; they smoke on campus; they smoke joints walking 
to class. They do it anyway. So they're going to keep doing what 
they're doing right now, and they're going to have a little bit less 
fear of getting busted for it."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom