Pubdate: Thu, 10 Mar 2005 Source: Massachusetts Daily Collegian (MA Edu) Copyright: 2005 Daily Collegian Contact: 413-545-1592 Website: http://www.DailyCollegian.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1401 Author: Justin Sawyer Note: Publication of University of Massachusetts Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) DECRIMINALIZING MARIJUANA This Is A Call For Help. This Is A Call To Action. The students at UMASS are in a privileged position, a place that confers to us enormous political power. No where else in Massachusetts is there such a high concentration and such a large number of people from all over the state in one place. We have students from every single legislative district in Massachusetts, constituents of every representative in the state government. We could be the megaphone of political change in the state if we wanted to be, but what would we say? What issue could be big enough to unite most of the student body, grads and undergrads, together in solidarity to work for change? I can think of more than a few, but I'll just give you one: nonsensical drug laws that overcrowd prisons, arrest and give criminal records to honest decent people, and cost us taxpayers disgusting amounts of money to enforce laws that most of us think should be at the very least drastically altered. So what are we going to do about it? I mean, we can't just make marijuana legal, right? The answer is maybe not right away, but we can get on that path and we can start by decriminalizing it. This means that a person cannot be arrested, jailed, and receive a criminal record from minor possession for the drug (less than one ounce) but only fined. In the elections last November, all 12 Massachusetts counties that had nonbinding ballot questions about decriminalizing marijuana passed, many by wide margins. The Cannabis Reform Coalition is a politically active RSO here at UMass and the oldest college-based group working to reform drug laws in the entire country. We're working with the Partnership for Responsible Drug Information to pass a marijuana decriminalization bill in the state legislature that would have the effects I described above, regardless of reason for use of the drug, and we are closer than anyone has ever been to getting this bill passed in the state within the next year and a half. We believe this is a noble cause and it cannot be achieved without the support of all of you reading this right now. Please, take action and stand up for your rights as citizens. For more information, come to the CRC Office rm. 322 in the Student Union, and help us make a difference. Justin Sawyer UMASS Cannabis Reform Coalition