Pubdate: Thu, 20 Aug 2015
Source: Napa Valley Register (CA)
Copyright: 2015 Lee Enterprises
Contact: http://www.napavalleyregister.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/736
Author: Paul Armentano
Note: Paul Armentano is the deputy director of NORML - the National
Organization for the reform of Marijuana Laws - and also serves as a
senior policy adviser for Freedom Leaf, Inc. He resides in Vallejo.
AMERICANS VIEWS HAVE EVOLVED ON MARIJUANA POLICY
In his op-ed article against the legalization of cannabis in
California ("Marijuana's harms ignored in push for legalization,"
Aug. 14), guest columnist Thomas Elias yearns for a time when shaming
and fear-mongering, not facts, drove the marijuana policy debate in
America. Those days are largely over.
Voters' views on pot have evolved in recent years based on both the
failures of marijuana prohibition and the success of its legalization
and regulation. For decades, those opposed to amending cannabis
criminalization warned that any significant change in marijuana
policy would lead to a plethora of unintended consequences. Yet the
initial experiences in Colorado and Washington, in addition to many
other states' deep-rooted experiences regulating the production and
distribution of marijuana for therapeutic purposes, has shown these
fears to be misplaced.
For example, neither the imposition of statewide medical marijuana
legalization nor the establishment of dispensaries is associated with
increases in violent crimes, burglary or property crimes, according
to the available literature. A federally commissioned study,
appearing in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, determined
that there are "no observed associations between the density of
medical marijuana dispensaries and either violent or property crime
rates." A second paper, published last year in the journal PLOS One,
concluded that legalizing medical marijuana access at the state level
"is not predictive of higher crime rates and may be related to
reductions in rates of homicide and assault."
Similarly, incidences of violent crime in Denver, the epicenter of
Colorado's commercial marijuana industry, fell significantly
following the opening of retail marijuana businesses in 2014. Between
Jan. 1 and April 30 last year, violent crime and property crime
dropped 10.6 percent compared with that same span one year earlier.
Contrary to Elias' claims, liberalized marijuana laws also are not
predictive of upticks in overall cannabis use by young people.
Authors of a federally commissioned study published just this past
week in Lancet Psychiatry assessed the relationship between state
medical marijuana laws and rates of self-reported adolescent
marijuana use over a 24-year period in a sampling of over one million
adolescents in 48 states.
Researchers reported no increase in teens' overall use of the plant
that could be attributable to changes in law, and acknowledged a
"robust" decrease in use among eighth graders. They concluded: "...
the results of this study showed no evidence for an increase in
adolescent marijuana use after the passage of state laws permitting
use of marijuana for medical purposes. ... concerns that increased
marijuana use is an unintended effect of state marijuana laws seem unfounded."
Researchers' results were similar to those of a July 2014 paper
published by the nonpartisan National Bureau of Economic Research
that determined: "Our results are not consistent with the hypothesis
that the legalization of medical marijuana caused an increase in the
use of marijuana among high school students.
In fact, estimates from our preferred specification are small,
consistently negative and are never statistically distinguishable from zero."
Likewise, state survey data released last August by the Colorado
Department of Public Health & Environment found that fewer high
school students in the state consumed cannabis in 2013 as compared
with 2011. (Marijuana legalization went into effect in Colorado in
2012, although retail sales of cannabis to adults did not begin until
Jan. 1, 2014.) According to the survey, the percentage of high
schoolers who reported using marijuana within the past 30 days fell
from 22 percent in 2011 to 20 percent in 2013 - a percentage that is
below the national average.
In short, state and local governments can regulate cannabis in a
manner that keeps pot out of the hands of children while
simultaneously satisfying the seller, the consumer and the taxman -
and the sky won't fall. Just the opposite is true. Regulations, such
as age restrictions for consumers and licensing requirements for
commercial producers and merchants, are effective and proven
alternatives to prohibition. For instance, the public's overall
consumption of alcohol and tobacco, and young people's use in
particular, now stands at near-historic lows.
According to recent federal government figures, alcohol consumption
within the past 30 days among young people has fallen from 70 percent
of 12th-graders in 1980 to 40 percent today.
Monthly tobacco use among 12th-graders has similarly plunged from
nearly 40 percent in the late 1970s to just 16 percent today.
These results have not been achieved by imposing blanket
criminalization upon society, but rather by regulation and public
education. Policymakers should welcome the opportunity to bring these
necessary and long-overdue controls to the cannabis market.
It makes no sense from a public health perspective, a fiscal
perspective or a moral perspective to perpetuate the prosecution and
stigmatization of those adults who choose to responsibly consume a
substance that is objectively safer than either alcohol or tobacco.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom