http://drugpolicycentral.com/hosting/ Pubdate: Sun, 17 Nov 2002 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Page: A1 - Front Page Copyright: 2002 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52 Author: Farah Stockman, Globe Staff, Globe Correspondent Note: Globe correspondent Chris Tangney contributed to this report. Cited: Massachusetts Cannabis Reform Coalition http://www.masscann.org/ Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) http://www.mapinc.org/area/Massachusetts MARIJUANA MOVEMENT ROLLS INTO THE MAINSTREAM One is a retired judge who says he has never smoked marijuana in his life. Another is an economist who says he last touched the drug decades ago, in college, and didn't like it. Yet another is a lawyer who acknowledges that he ''absolutely'' smokes pot. James W. Dolan, Jeffrey Miron, and Michael Cutler are the white-collar public face of the Drug Policy Forum of Massachusetts, a newly formed group that helped put a nonbinding initiative to decriminalize marijuana on the ballot in 19 legislative districts across the state. The initiative, which proposed making possession of a small amount of marijuana a civil offense - punishable by a $100 fine similar to a parking ticket - passed everywhere it appeared on the ballot, including nine districts in Greater Boston. Bolstered by a Boston University study that calculated the state could save $24 million if the initiative were enacted, the measure passed with roughly 70 percent approval of voters in four districts that include parts of Brookline, Jamaica Plain, and Roslindale. ''This vote shows that these attitudes are mainstream,'' said Cutler, interim director of the Drug Policy Forum, which commissioned the BU study. Now the group hopes to work like a think tank, not a grass-roots coalition. Its members strive for a board of directors filled with professors, not potheads. While their friends who put on the annual Freedom Rally focus on the right to smoke, the Drug Policy Forum champions fiscal savings. Antidrug activists say they've noticed that the marijuana movement has gotten a makeover and has seen widespread success among mainstream voters, but they warn the public should still be wary. ''It's a very smart political move on the part of marijuana lobbyists,'' said Maria Cheevers, executive director of the Boston Coalition Against Drugs and Violence. ''The group that is coming at this from a professional perspective, arguing that this is saving money on the war on drugs, can sound much more credible than the old potheads' argument ... But it's a slippery slope. Before you know it, it's OK to sell [marijuana] in the stores, and the kids aren't showing up at school any more because they're stoned.'' For 13 years, the flag-bearer of the movement to reform marijuana laws was the annual Freedom Rally, put on by the Massachusetts Cannabis Reform Coalition. But some argue that the rally's thousands of stoned youths in ripped jeans hurt the cause more than helped it. In 1998, a Globe article called the rally's participants 1960s ''throwbacks.'' In 1999, a Herald editorial called them ''burned-out relics.'' Perhaps the height of negative publicity came when the coalition's president, Bill Dowling, was arrested for donning a pig's snout and oinking at undercover police. ''I think the public gets alarmed by people who show up at the rallies and flout the law,'' said Dolan. ''The rally doesn't do much to change people's minds on the issue. It may have to some degree the opposite effect.'' Two years ago, a group of coalition volunteers diverted their efforts from the rally to a signature-collecting push to put decriminalization on the ballot in three legislative districts. Decriminalization, they argued, would not change much: While those found guilty of possessing marijuana can face up to six months in jail, the vast majority of cases only result in a fine. Changing the law - which 13 states have already done - would be more efficient and would not risk a young offender's access to jobs and student loans, activists argue. Critics counter that it would send the wrong message to teenagers and could bring a dramatic increase in drug use. But in 2000, the measures passed in all three districts, including the communities of Somerville, Framingham, and Ipswich. That victory prompted 180-degree policy shifts among some lawmakers. State Senator Charles Shannon, a former police officer, sponsored a bill on Beacon Hill that he would have once vehemently opposed. ''My constituents told me in overwhelming numbers that they support the decriminalization of less than an ounce of marijuana,'' Shannon, a Democrat from Somerville, told the Criminal Justice Committee in March 2001. ''Current law dictates that people who use marijuana on a purely personal basis be classified as criminals. In the case of first-time offenders, we are forcing them to relive their past mistakes every time they apply for a job or every time they apply for a student loan,'' he said. Emboldened by their legislative successes, some Cannabis Reform Coalition activists formed the Drug Policy Forum, which they hoped would lobby for change in all drug policy. ''There's a bunch of us who ... thought that there needed to be another face, besides what appeared at the Freedom Rally,'' said Cutler, 53, who once helped organize the event. While the coalition's members are known for eating hemp cereal, reading the magazine High Times, and socializing with subgroups like Jamaica Plain's ''Grannies for Ganja,'' the Drug Policy Forum has sought support from academics and conservative think tanks. And while the coalition survives off grass-roots membership dues, works out of members' homes, and is barred by law from certain political activities, the Drug Policy Forum has already received grant money, laid groundwork for opening a full-time office, and commissioned Miron, a BU economist, to study how much minor marijuana offenses cost the state. The forum also scored a major victory by recruiting Dolan as an adviser. Years ago, Cutler was a young lawyer defending a marijuana smoker and Dolan was the presiding judge who refused to dismiss the case. But after years of presiding over drug-related homicide trials in Dorchester, Dolan decided drug offenses should be treated as a public health problem, not crimes. He helped found the state's drug courts, which offer alternative sentences for addicts. ''I was a judge when all of the motor-vehicle offenses were criminal matters - speeding, red lights,'' Dolan said, adding it is ''just a matter of time'' before marijuana possession is also decriminalized. David Rosenbloom, a longtime critic of the marijuana movement who heads Join Together, a drug prevention group, acknowledges that the activists' new tactics are starting to tap into the concerns of mainstream society by emphasizing cost savings and treatment. Still, Rosenbloom wondered how new the Drug Policy Forum really is. ''Is that a new organization or just a new name?'' he asked. ''I suspect it's many of the same people who have been working on this issue over the years.'' That's a question that even the activists themselves have yet to answer. Both the Cannabis Reform Coalition and the Drug Policy Forum sent out news releases over this year's ballot success, praising the teamwork that led to victory. But privately, Dowling grumbles that the forum did not do as much work as the coalition. ''They started late in the game and provided some paid signature-gatherers, whose signatures were frankly not nearly as quality as the ones our volunteers collected,'' he said. Still, in this movement, there's no place for rivalry. ''It may be the public's perception that MassCANN is a bunch of freaks and DPF is a strait-laced group, but that's not reality,'' Dowling said. ''Everybody that's involved in the Drug Policy Forum met through MassCANN ... We have always had more than one face.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake