Pubdate: Mon, 16 Nov 2020
Source: Hill, The (US DC)
Copyright: 2020 The Hill
Contact:  http://www.hillnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1509
Author: Udi Ofer

50 YEARS AFTER THE START OF THE WAR ON DRUGS, AMERICANS HAVE A CHANCE TO FIX 
THE HARM IT CREATED

Next year will mark 50 years since President Richard Nixon declared
drugs "public enemy number one," launching a new war on drugs that has
pumped hundreds of billions of dollars into law enforcement, led to
the incarceration of millions of people - disproportionately Black -
and has done nothing to prevent drug overdoses. In spite of the
widespread, growing opposition to this failed war, made clear yet
again on Election Day, punitive policies and responses to drug use and
possession persist. As President-elect Joe Biden and Vice
President-elect Kamala Harris prepare to take office, it is abundantly
clear that they have a mandate from the electorate to tackle this issue.

Today there are more than 1.35 million arrests per year for drug
possession, with 500,000 arrests for marijuana alone. By comparison,
there are less than 500,000 arrests per year for violent crimes. Every
25 seconds a person is arrested for possessing drugs for personal use,
and on average, a Black person is 3.73 times more likely to be
arrested for marijuana possession than a white person, even though
Black and white people use marijuana at similar rates. At least
130,000 people are behind bars in the U.S. for drug possession, some
45,000 of them in state prisons and 88,000 in jails, most of the
latter in pretrial detention.

While tens of billions of dollars are spent each year to prosecute
this war, more than 70,000 people still die of drug overdoses. Deaths
from heroin overdose in the United States rose 500 percent from 2001
to 2014. Overall deaths from drug overdoses remain higher than the
peak yearly death totals ever recorded for car accidents or guns.

The war on drugs has failed, and Americans on the right and left are
ready for it to end. These views were on display at the ballot box
this month, when voters across the county approved every ballot
measure on scaling back the war on drugs. From Arizona, Oregon, and
Montana to South Dakota, New Jersey, and Washington D.C., Americans
turned out in droves to say that it's time to stop criminalizing drug
use.

The effort in Oregon, led by the Drug Policy Alliance and supported by
the ACLU, was the most groundbreaking. This ballot measure
decriminalized the possession of drugs for personal use, replacing it
with a maximum fine of $100 and funding drug addiction treatment and
recovery programs with the savings and tax revenue from marijuana.
Measure 110 will prevent more than 3,000 arrests per year for
possession of drugs such as heroin, cocaine and methamphetamines.
Oregon is now the first state in the nation to decriminalize all
drugs, laying the foundation for reorienting and grounding the
government's response to drugs in public health rather than criminal
law.

Other states also showed that drug law reform is a winning issue on
both sides of the aisle. Arizona, Montana, New Jersey, and South
Dakota all legalized marijuana, joining 11 other states and Washington
D.C. South Dakota, where Trump received 62 percent of the vote, showed
that legalizing marijuana is a bipartisan issue, as did Montana, which
elected Republicans to every major office in the state, while also
voting to legalize marijuana.

The war on drugs is inextricable from the struggle for racial justice
in the United States. President Nixon launched the war in an effort to
win more white voters in the South. He knew that by linking drug use
to civil rights protests and Black communities he could appeal to the
white vote opposed to racial integration. John Ehrlichman, a prominent
official in the Nixon White House, said in 1994: "We knew we couldn't
make it illegal to be either against the war or Black, but by getting
the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and Blacks with
heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those
communities."

With resounding victories in red and blue states on marijuana,
President-elect Biden and Vice President-elect Harris have a clear
decree from voters. The Biden-Harris administration will have numerous
options to act. Sen. Harris is the primary sponsor of the Marijuana
Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement (MORE) Act (H.R. 3884, S.
2227), federal legislation that would decriminalize marijuana, remove
it from the list of scheduled substances, expunge many past
convictions and arrests, and support racial justice efforts. The House
of Representatives is scheduled to vote on the MORE Act next month.
The Biden-Harris transition team should provide their support.

Beyond legislation, the Biden-Harris administration can act by using
the president's clemency power to commute the sentences of people in
federal prison for marijuana offenses and other drug-related offenses,
and pardon people who are living with past criminal convictions for
marijuana and other drug-related offenses and are facing thousands of
collateral consequences. They do not need congressional approval for
these actions, which could help thousands of people.

Today, policymakers and the public alike are increasingly adopting
approaches that treat substance use as a public health issue rather
than a criminal justice one. This recognition is bipartisan, and the
war on drugs has not differentiated between blue states and red
states. The Biden-Harris administration can begin healing our nation
by moving decisively on this issue and beginning to repair the harm
caused by 50 years of this failed war.

Udi Ofer is director of the ACLU's Justice Division.
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