Pubdate: Wed, 25 Mar 2015 Source: Gazette, The (Colorado Springs, CO) Copyright: 2015 The Gazette Contact: http://www.gazette.com/sections/opinion/submitletter/ Website: http://www.gazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/165 Series: Special report, 'Clearing the Haze:' FIX COLORADO'S POT PROBLEMS Today concludes The Gazette's four-part perspective on the world's boldest public policy experiment with commercialized recreational and medical pot. The Gazette created a special project team made up of editorial staff and a seasoned reporter to look into these claims and compare them to information compiled after a year of legal recreational marijuana sales in Colorado. We wanted to examine whether claims of legalization are on a path to realization. We also looked for stories that have not been reported to create a clearer picture of the state of the industry. Since publication began Sunday, the series has ignited controversy across social media platforms and generated media interest. The Gazette has received letters from all over the country. About 95 percent of emails to The Gazette have expressed appreciation, with the majority emanating from professionals in addiction treatment and medicine. Much of our research revealed a disturbing trajectory that could have a increasingly negative effect on Colorado. Among highlights of our findings: - - Coloradans voted to regulate and tax marijuana like alcohol, but the regulatory system is flawed. Tax revenues have underwhelmed expectations, as Colorado residents opt for barely taxed "medical" marijuana that can be obtained by paying a small fee and complaining of aches or pain. - - Easy access to low-cost medical pot has created a black market that circumvents a commercial system promised to help fund schools. The promised prevention efforts have fallen short, blurring lines between public information and taxpayer-subsidized promotion of marijuana. - - Marijuana consumption may shrink parts of the teenage brain. - - Legalization has made laws against driving under the influence more difficult to enforce. - - The black market is thriving in Colorado, even though legalization was promised as a means to shut it down. The low risk-reward factor has made Colorado an attractive location for cultivating marijuana that is sold illegally out of state. Despite legalization, most marijuana sold within Colorado is sold illegally by black-market dealers. Nonregulated dealers benefit from a lack of enforcement against cultivation while also benefiting from avoidance of the taxes and regulatory hurdles that were supposed to make the trade safe. - - Voters were told legalization would unclog prisons and jails. Research shows only 1.4 percent of inmates in the corrections system were convicted on crimes involving only marijuana. - - Authorities have seen a near tripling of hash-oil explosions since legalization of hash-oil extraction. - - The commercialized, recreational and medical retail systems have taken a disproportionate toll on teens and younger children. Schools, parents and drug counselors report significantly higher use among teens. Physicians are increasingly worried about the effects of marijuana on nursing babies with mothers who use the drug. - - Employers report hiring more out-of-state construction workers because of the high rate of positive drug tests among the in-state workforce. - - Doctors, the Society of Addiction Medicine and other medical associations see no medicinal value in marijuana. By any serious, objective observation - with few exceptions - Colorado's growing medical marijuana industry mostly serves as a means of marijuana tax avoidance for permanent residents. If marijuana proponents want the drug safe, regulated, taxed and legal they will take a more realistic look at a new system that has let people down. When tens of thousands of nonmarijuana users voted for Amendment 64, they did so to end black markets. They voted to generate money for schools. They voted for more safety, not less. The state, and the industry it regulates, need to fix a system that's broken. Otherwise, voters need to undo Amendment 64. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom