URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v15/n127/a03.html
Newshawk: http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm
Votes: 0
Pubdate: Sat, 28 Feb 2015
Source: Fairbanks Daily News-Miner (AK)
Copyright: 2015 Fairbanks Publishing Company, Inc.
Contact:
Website: http://newsminer.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/764
LOCAL MARIJUANA CLARITY WELCOME: DESPITE TIGHT TIMEFRAME, LOCAL
GOVERNMENTS ENACT COMMON-SENSE RULES
It took a couple days post-legalization, but Interior municipal
governments appear to be on the same page with local marijuana rules.
That's no small feat. With little time to collaborate on rules in
Fairbanks, North Pole and the borough at large, the potential existed
for serious conflicts between how marijuana could be possessed and
used in each of our local communities. Such an outcome would have
been a headache for legal professionals to sort out and would have
had impacts on local residents confused about the overlaps and
discrepancies in municipal rules.
Kudos to our local governments for independently coming to
common-sense conclusions about what behavior is acceptable among
Interior residents.
The role of local government in regulation of personal possession and
use of marijuana is chiefly to determine what "public use" of the
drug means, as such use is barred under the language of recently
enacted Ballot Measure 2. There is considerable latitude as to what
is "public" under the law: clearly, property and buildings owned by
state and local government would be public.
But what of businesses used by the public, especially restaurants or
bars where other drugs like alcohol and tobacco are allowed?
What about private property in close proximity to public areas, where
the drug's use would be visible and potentially impact members of the public?
In the days leading up to Feb. 24, when personal possession and use
of marijuana became legal, the city of Wasilla showed just how broad
municipal governments' interpretation of their authority could be.
The Wasilla city government voted Feb. 23 to ban the making of
marijuana edibles, concentrates and extracts even within residents'
homes. The source of that level of regulatory authority is unclear
under the law, as is the government's ability to enforce such a ban.
Had such restraints been put into effect locally, there would have
been serious differences in what behavior was acceptable depending on
one's location in the greater Fairbanks area.
Measures considered by local governments here didn't conflict a great
deal, but there was one major difference between city and borough
ordinances as they were originally proposed.
While the Fairbanks and North Pole city ordinances allowed for use on
private property with consent of the property owner, borough mayor
Luke Hopkins proposed that personal use not be allowed within view of
public property. That's a major distinction - if enacted, it would
have barred most residents from partaking in cannabis in their yards
or property outside their homes visible from public roads.
The mayor's ordinance, however, was amended to be largely in line
with the North Pole and Fairbanks rules.
As a result, whether you're in Fairbanks, North Pole or anywhere else
in the borough, the rules are the same: you can use marijuana in a
private home or on private property so long as that property belongs
to you or you have the property owner's permission.
That simplicity of law not only makes sense and jibes with Alaska
sentiment about privacy and property rights, but also has the virtue
of being simple enough for residents to easily understand. Despite a
short timetable in which to draw up rules and a broad range of views
on marijuana in general, our local governments have independently
arrived at a common-sense definition of public use. Interior
residents will benefit from that clarity and simplicity.
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom
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