Pubdate: Sat, 22 Jul 2000 Source: Daily News, The (New Zealand) Address: PO Box 444, New Plymouth, Taranaki, New Zealand Fax: +64 6 758 6849 Author: Gordon Brown EDUCATION SPOKESMAN OPPOSES ANY CHANGE TO MARIJUANA LAWS National education spokesman Nick Smith is a man on a mission. The former National Party minister has been in the region visiting schools as part of his nation-wide campaign against decriminalising the marijuana laws. On Wednesday, Dr Smith visited Highlands Intermediate in New Plymouth and yesterday he met the principals of Inglewood, Stratford and Hawera High Schools. Dr Smith told The Daily News that the resolve in the community to fight any proposed law change was noticeably hardening. "I've visited 20 schools to date and the response has been very positive. No one wants us to turn into a country of losers, but that's what any move to change the current laws would do. "And make no mistake, there are very powerful forces in favour of decriminalising marijuana, from the Prime Minister down. "The proposals are both dopy and dangerous. Our objective is to galvanise every community in New Zealand and stop it in its tracks." The National opposition is promoting a nationwide petition in partnership with the School Trustees Association. Inglewood High school principal Lyn Bublitz is an executive member of the Secondary Schools Principal Association which had also thrown its weight behind the move to retain the status quo on the drug laws. "Marijuana use is a problem every secondary school in Taranaki, in the country, has faced. I'm pleased to get the opportunity to have Dr Smith at the school," he said. "It is freely available. That's the reality. There are problems all schools face. How to protect our students? How to assist the kids who do have problems? "While there are those who advocate occasional use, saying it has no effect on them, so therefore it doesn't affect others. "But it does have an effect on some school-age kids. It plays games with their minds, destroys their ambitions. "A teenager without ambition is just a shell." Dr Smith says he is becoming increasingly confident any attempt to change the law could struggle to get a majority in Parliament. "In February it was a lost cause. There were overwhelming numbers in parliament for a change, now I think it hangs in the balance." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck