Pubdate: Fri, 28 Aug 2015 Source: Alaska Dispatch News (AK) Copyright: 2015 Alaska Dispatch Publishing Contact: http://www.adn.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/18 Note: Anchorage Daily News until July '14 Author: John A. Farleigh REGULATE MARIJUANA LIKE ALCOHOL That's what was on the campaign signs said and that's what Alaskans voted for. The Anchorage Assembly is not respecting the voters' will with it's "open container" requirement that marijuana be carried outside the passenger compartment (in the trunk). Alcohol can be carried inside a car as long as the seal is not broken. This law assures that alcohol is not being used by the driver. Thus the term "open container." Open containers must be carried in the trunk or in a locked glove box. Too bad there isn't a way to tell if marijuana is being used by the driver. Oh wait, there is! Unburnt marijuana is marijuana that is not currently being used. The open container law should define burnt marijuana as an "open container" and treat it like alcohol. Burnt and unburnt marijuana have strong and vastly different smells making this an easy ordinance to enforce. An unlit joint or bag of weed should be treated like an unopened bottle. Sometimes when lawmakers don't like a law and they can't repeal it, they pass restrictions that make no sense other than trying to end the activity allowed by the law that they don't support. A recent example is Texas passing restrictions on abortion clinics that forced most of them to close (laws later rejected by courts). If they can't change the law, at least they can try to sabotage it. Mayor Berkowitz should veto this ordinance and send the Assembly back to the drawing board to pass an ordinance that is not excessively restrictive and respects the will of the voters. Legislators, Assembly members and regulators that don't support legal marijuana should get over their rare loss and respect the vote. Quit passing overly restrictive or expensive laws aimed at marijuana users and businesses that are designed to thwart the voters will. By the way, I've never been limited to purchasing one case of beer or one bottle of rum at a liquor store. Why the limits on how much marijuana I can buy or possess? - - John A. Farleigh Anchorage - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom