URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v15/n157/a08.html
Newshawk: http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm
Votes: 0
Pubdate: Tue, 17 Mar 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
MARIJUANA BILL'S FUTURE UNCLEAR: WITH SEN. KELLY'S CONTROVERSIAL
AMENDMENT, SB 30 MAY NOT BE PASSED THIS SESSION
After a rough initial outing and complete rewrite, the Alaska
Legislature's attempt at setting state rules for marijuana
legalization appears to have ground to a halt once more. Senate Bill
30 would rewrite state laws to reflect marijuana's legal status for
personal possession and use following voter approval of Ballot
Measure 2 in November 2014. But a controversial amendment by
Fairbanks Sen. Pete Kelly has dimmed the prospect that a fix to
conflicting state laws on legalization is imminent.
At first, SB 30 was an ugly bill. Rather than reflect marijuana's
legal status, as originally written, the bill would have left state
drug laws intact - including illegal status for pot - and simply let
defendants charged with marijuana possession offer the passage of
legalization as an affirmative defense. Legislators, state law
officials and legalization advocates railed against the bill's
language as not reflective of voters' intention in passing the ballot measure.
After a brief hiatus, the bill was rewritten to better address laws
in the state that needed to be changed to reflect the drug's legal
status. It took time and debate, but the Legislature appeared to be
heading toward a bill that would clarify state drug laws, reflect
voter intention and maintain prohibitions on larger-scale marijuana growing.
That changed last week, when Sen. Kelly introduced an amendment that
would make marijuana concentrates and edibles - and perhaps even the
plant itself - illegal in 2017, as soon as the initiative could
legally be altered.
Sen. Kelly, in arguing for his amendment, said voters had no idea the
marijuana initiative would legalize marijuana edibles and
concentrates if passed. While it's true the language of the ballot
measure as it appeared on the ballot doesn't make explicit mention of
edibles and concentrates, instead referring to "marijuana and
marijuana products," significant advertising and debating was done by
those opposing the measure that highlighted the fact such products
also would be made legal. Alaska news reports and coverage of the
legalization of the drug in Colorado and Washington also made
repeated mention of edibles and other marijuana products. While some
Alaskans may not have been aware of that aspect of the measure, it's
a safe bet most did know about it.
Whether or not one agrees on Sen. Kelly's reading of voter awareness
of the legalization of derivative marijuana products, the wording of
his amendment, either by accident or design, might well ban marijuana
possession and use outright come 2017. It would criminalize any
"material" containing tetrahydrocannabinol ( THC ), the active
ingredient in marijuana. It's not hard to see how that could result
in a complete ban on marijuana.
So SB 30 appears dead in the water once again, with no hearings
scheduled and no apparent way to resolve the bill's conflict with
voter intent in passing marijuana legalization.
All of a sudden, 90 days is looking like it might not be enough time
for legislators to clean up state drug laws and bring Alaska's
statutes into line with the intent of its people. If that proves to
be the case, it would be an indictment of those in a position to make
a difference on the issue in Juneau.
Municipalities have done good work in sorting out their definitions
of how and where marijuana can be used. The Legislature should get on
the ball and eliminate the conflicts in state law, not create them.
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom
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