Pubdate: Mon, 24 Nov 2008 Source: Diamondback, The (U of MD Edu) Copyright: 2008 Diamondback Contact: http://www.diamondbackonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/758 Author: Allison Stice Cited: Students for Sensible Drug Policy http://www.ssdp.org/ DRUG POLICY CONFERENCE SPARKS NEW TACTICS, PLANS Campus Students for Sensible Drug Policy activists said they feel reinvigorated in their fight for campus and national drug policy reform after this weekend's largely successful conference, where members from more than 100 sister chapters across the country, the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia gathered to share tips and success stories. Drug policy activists said they will discuss and improve the campus chapter's battles to implement a Good Samaritan Policy and equalize punishments for marijuana and alcohol violations. "We're trying a couple different strategies, one of which would involve a coalition of student groups, [Student Government Association] members and members of different boards like the student conduct committee [of the University Senate]," said chapter president Amanda Simmons. "When we do push this through, we want to have all these people on board." In 2006, the group managed to push a bill that would make marijuana violations on par with alcohol offenses through the SGA and the Residence Halls Association before it was halted by university officials. "The whole conference gave me a very renewing feeling, because it can get depressing to be involved in this cause when you come up against an administration like ours," said SSDP member Dave Shaughnessy. Senior mathematics and philosophy major Edward Spriggs said it was encouraging to learn about legislative successes in Massachusetts, where possession of one ounce or less of marijuana was recently decriminalized. "While we're over here trying to get the Good Samaritan Policy enacted, which is something we really care about and think would be beneficial, and people just don't listen, it was nice to hear some good news," he said. Spriggs said the lobbying training on Friday was the most valuable and enjoyable part of the conference. The Marijuana Policy Project's Aaron Houston, the only marijuana reform lobbyist on Capitol Hill, instructed conference-goers before sending them out in groups according to district. Spriggs and another SSDP member spoke with Rep. Donna Edwards' (D-Md.) staffers, whom he said were very receptive to the need for changing disparities in crack and powder cocaine sentencing. "Unfortunately, the staffer at Sen. [Barbara] Mikulski's office literally flinched when my friend, Vice President Irina Alexander, said the word 'crack,'" Spriggs said. "You can't win 'em all." SSDP members would ultimately like drug abuse to be treated as a public health issue instead of as a criminal matter. Simmons said she saw the importance of her activism when almost every hand in the packed Grand Ballroom went up for having been incarcerated, or knowing someone who had, for victimless drug crimes. "It was depressing, but uniting to know that we're all in this together," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake