Pubdate: Mon, 26 Nov 2007
Source: Sun Chronicle (Attleboro, MA)
Copyright: 2007 Sun Chronicle
Contact:  http://www.thesunchronicle.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3184
Author:  Jim Hand, Sun Chronicle Staff
Note: The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Cited: Committee for Sensible Marijuana Policy 
http://sensiblemarijuanapolicy.org/about.html
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

GROUP: PUT POT ON BALLOT

Possession of small amounts of marijuana would no longer be a crime 
if a reform effort under way in Massachusetts is successful.

A group calling itself the Committee for Sensible Marijuana Policy 
has gathered more than 100,000 signatures to get its proposal on the 
2008 ballot. The proposed change would make possession of one ounce 
or less of marijuana a civil offense punishable by a $100 fine, 
rather than a criminal offense.

Whitney Taylor, campaign manager for the group, said 11 other states 
have decriminalized marijuana and there has been no increase in use 
in those places.

She said giving a person a criminal record for possession of small 
amounts of marijuana is too harsh because that record can prevent 
them from getting jobs or college financial aid.

"It's a lifelong penalty," she said.

She also said a study has found that prosecuting minor marijuana 
cases costs Massachusetts $24.3 million a year in police and court expenses.

"We are seeing human costs and financial costs," she said.

Similar proposals have been made in the state Legislature over the 
years and have never gotten anywhere.

Law enforcement and some child advocacy groups oppose 
decriminalization because they say it would send a message that 
society condones smoking marijuana or at least does not take it seriously.

A spokesman for Bristol County District Attorney Sam Sutter said 
prosecutors in Massachusetts oppose the measure.

Some critics say they oppose decriminalizing any amount of marijuana, 
saying it could send the wrong signal to children.

Michael Mather, a retired police officer and head of the anti-drug 
education group DARE-Massachusetts, says easing the marijuana laws is 
a bad idea.

"It's not the right thing to do to our youth. Our youth needs to be 
strong and not have these drugs inside of them," he said.

He also said marijuana could act as a so-called "gateway drug" to 
other, more harmful drugs.

"I'm not saying that everyone who smokes pot will do heroin, but 
almost everyone who does heroin didn't start out with heroin," he said.

Surprisingly, some of the toughest criticism of the proposed ballot 
question is coming from other activist groups also pushing for the 
decriminalization of marijuana.

They point to a portion of the proposed ballot question that would 
define possession of marijuana to include finding traces of the drug 
"in the urine, blood, saliva, sweat, hair, fingernails, toe nails or 
other tissue or fluid of the human body."

"It uses the drug laws to identify marijuana smokers not who are 
impaired, but who might have smoked in the past six weeks or so," 
said Keith Stroup, founder of NORML, a national nonprofit group 
advocating for the easing of marijuana laws.

"If it makes it to the ballot, a lot of people who would be strong 
supporters of decriminalizing marijuana may not be able to support 
this fatally flawed language," said Stroup, who was arrested for 
smoking a marijuana cigarette at a rally on Boston Common.

The ballot question isn't the only effort underway to ease the 
state's drug laws.

A bill working its way through the Statehouse would also 
decriminalize possession of an ounce or less of the drug, but set a 
higher fine of $250.

The bill has already received a public hearing, but won't come up for 
debate and a possible vote until next year.

Bardsley said the wrong message is being sent to children by the 
current law because people wealthy enough to afford high-powered 
lawyers can get off without a criminal record while the poor cannot.

The group said it has submitted 105,000 signatures to city and town 
clerks across the state, well above the 66,000 needed to move the 
petition process along.

Once the signatures are certified, the matter goes to the Legislature.

If the Legislature does not pass the measure into law, the group can 
collect another 11,000 signatures and put the question on the ballot 
in November of next year.

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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom