Pubdate: Wed, 04 Apr 2007 Source: Diamondback, The (U of MD Edu) Copyright: 2007 Diamondback Contact: http://www.diamondbackonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/758 Author: Scott Ratner Note: Scott Ratner is a sophomore government and politics major. SUPPORT FAIR DRUG POLICIES Today, the SGA will hear a bill that would support the RHA vote last February to urge the administration to reduce first-time possession of small amounts of marijuana to a B-level offense, thus lessening the draconian punishments the university currently imposes on students unfortunate enough to have been busted on the campus. Not only would a victory in the SGA affirm that the ramifications of such a reckless and counter-intuitive policy have inflicted far greater damage on the university than the drug itself ever could, but it would also have a further reaching and verifiable impact: It would demonstrate that the student body has the capacity to generate change and influence the highest echelons of the university. Few student groups have been so adamant about reforming university policy as the Students for Sensible Drug Policy and National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws, who have led a tireless campaign to end the senseless and misguided drug policies that have resulted in countless first offenders losing financial aid (many of whom are then unable to resume college), enduring harsh and unreasonable mandatory testing and infringing upon the rights of all students who can be searched, handcuffed and prosecuted all at the behest of a residence assistant who may smell marijuana coming from a room. However, a positive vote from the SGA reinforces the message already sent to the university last year when the majority of students voted to lessen penalties for marijuana offenses. Although the university continues to place possession of marijuana in the same category as theft and rape, the student body should not remain silent or complacent in the face of such intolerable and abusive policies. There are a number of contentious university policies that students have repeatedly expressed the desire to change, or at least to have more influence over in the decision-making process. Soaring textbook prices and the riot policy are just a few of them, and like most other such controversies, students have had little success in getting their voices heard by top university officials. However, no other student-related issue has garnered the popular support that drug reform has, despite countless setbacks from both the university and its various legislative bodies. If the university persists in refusing to adhere to the wishes of its student body, it would be a deliberate affront to our rights as students to have our voices heard in determining what policies are both practical and just. It is important to remember that reducing marijuana-related offenses to a B-level violation is not tantamount to endorsing the drug itself. It would only affect how the university views the offense and how it chooses to punish its students. That the State of Maryland or the federal government have enacted such severe prohibition laws does not obligate our university to mimic their destructive policies simply because we receive state funds. The university is an independent entity and not beholden to the wishes or demands of the state, and as such, our guidelines and rules should embody our own values and standards. Giving students a second chance without undercutting their funds, housing and perhaps any perceptions they may have about living under a fair, competent police force seems like a positive deviation from state guidelines, and one that could go even a long way to bringing forth positive change in the state of Maryland. While there are those who do not partake in marijuana or see the movement to decriminalize it as too futile to actively embrace, one should remember that not only are their tax dollars funding the incarceration of first-time and low-level offenders, but also that they have the actual means to generate change, and that their support to curtail police involvement in the dorms and regular civil rights abuses would have a profound and lasting impact on our university. A simple e-mail or visit to your SGA representative asking him or her to vote for the upcoming bill would go a long way to improving our university and proving that student support really means something. Scott Ratner is a sophomore government and politics major. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek