Pubdate: Fri, 24 Feb 2006 Source: Maneater, The (Columbia, MO Edu) Copyright: 2006 The Maneater Contact: http://www.themaneater.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1283 Author: Bailey Hirschburg, President, MU Chapter Of NORML Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) POT COMPROMISE ISN'T THE END OF THE STRUGGLE On Nov. 2, 2004, marijuana won in a landslide in Columbia. Proposition 1, known as the "smart sentencing" proposition, won with 61 percent of the vote. On any other issue, a 61 percent victory would have shut up the opposition. However, this is pot. On Monday, after months of haggling, the City Council ratified changes to the marijuana decriminalization ordinance passed by voters in 2004. As president of the MU chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, known as NORML, I'm close to this debate. I won't go into the changes adopted, though in the interest of being a good citizen, if you don't know them, I encourage you to find out. Rather than wait a year to see what the true impact of the marijuana ordinance was, a few angry parents and the Columbia Police Officers Association put up their anti-pot sandwich boards and began collecting signatures to put the issue back before the voters. However, if they put it on the ballot during the school year when college students could and would vote - as they had publicly promised to do - they feared they'd lose again. Meanwhile, those of us who had worked so hard to get the issue before the people were faced with the reality that if the issue got back on the ballot, the low turnout of non-presidential elections could spell disaster. We hadn't worried about low turnout in the frenzy of the 2004 presidential election, when more than 80 percent of registered voters cast a ballot. Trying to achieve such turnout simply on a marijuana proposition would have been an expensive campaign. Neither side was assured of victory, so they sought a compromise. I see both sides. On one hand I resent a few of the changes made to limit the scope of the ordinance, which in some ways makes it a three strikes rule. However, just because a majority - even a supermajority - - supports something, that doesn't make it infallible. Someone once said, "The minority opinion is sometimes wrong, the majority opinion always is." I'll never live in a world where everyone appreciates the utility and potential of marijuana, and that's comforting. Many people don't like enemies, but most like some opposition. For better or worse, this topic has been laid to rest. For the pro-marijuana crowd, there's no more talk of further liberalizing Columbia laws. NORML will continue efforts at the city level to educate. We have a regional conference on March 3 and 4. There is a medical marijuana bill in the Missouri House of Representatives, and we have so very far to go. And to those who helped make the landslide, thanks. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin