Pubdate: Wed, 16 Apr 2008 Source: Massachusetts Daily Collegian (U of MA, Edu) Copyright: 2008 Daily Collegian Contact: http://www.dailycollegian.com/home/lettertotheeditor/ Website: http://www.dailycollegian.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1401 Author: Teresa A. Franco Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular) AMHERST RESPECTS "EXTRAVAGANJA" Neon-colored flyers announcing "Extravaganja" paraded the walls among various artistic pot leaf depictions in the Cannabis Reform Coalition's office. The event, which usually attracts about 1,500 attendees in Amherst Commons, is a day of protesting the prohibition of marijuana. During the festival, rock rhythms and reggae beats blare through the crowd and echo in the streets, speeches are given and vendors are propped within the area. Among the crowd last year was the town manager of Amherst, Larry Shaffer. "I spent about 45 minutes there, and what I saw was a lot of young people having a good time," Shaffer said. "It was good to see a lot of people out. It afforded energy and excitement to our downtown and we're happy to see that." Travel 100 miles east of Amherst, and a town official attending an event like Extravaganja is highly unlikely. Unlike other marijuana festivals in Massachusetts, Extravaganja has received little police interference over the last 18 years. "We have this sacred vow of respect with the police every year," said Alex Arsenault, treasurer of the CRC. "They come up to us and are like, 'We're going to be here and we're not going to embarrass you if you don't embarrass us.' It's a really miraculous thing to me that it happens like that. I know at Hempfest in Boston cops are just running around arresting people." A few months ago, the town of Amherst did stir some controversy when they tried to impose a fee for holding the event on the town commons. The news reports implied the fee was specifically for Extravaganja, but Shaffer said the fee applies to all events taking place in Amherst commons. "When we have a large gathering, whether it's the boy scouts or Extravaganja, we have issues like who pays for public safety and who pays for police," Shaffer said. "Our issue is to make sure people's safety is protected and to keep traffic flowing properly." After the CRC protested and debated with the town, the fee was quickly dropped. The town agreed that is wasn't worth the effort to demand payment from event organizers. Other marijuana festivals in Massachusetts do not receive as much acceptance as Extravaganja, like the Freedom Rally in Boston held every September by the Massachusetts Cannabis Reform Coalition (Mass Cann). The festival resembles Extravaganja, but has a bigger draw and more police enforcement. Mass Cann said the meaning behind their cause is not portrayed fairly through the media. "When the media comes, the first thing they do is find some 15-year-old sparking up," said Fred Hapgood, a member of Mass Cann. "It's obviously bad publicity and makes people who are against the Freedom Rally point." Hapgood said there's more to the festival that gets overshadowed by the pro-drug aspect. "The rally represents the hippie culture. There are a lot of people walking around interacting with one another," said Hapgood. "The true sixties culture is associated with decriminalization. It's good for the culture as a whole to revisit that point of view and the point of view from those days." The Freedom Rally was also threatened with a hefty fee to hold the event, in the late nineties. Public officials loosened their grip after Mass Cann sued the city of Boston twice, saying the fee was unconstitutional. President of Mass Cann Bill Downing claims the only purpose of the fee was because "they didn't like marijuana and they didn't like our event." Mass Cann won the suit, but police still swarm the festival, keeping a cautious eye for clouds of smoke. Downing estimated that there were 50 arrests last year. He also said there can only be a certain amount of arrests due to the limited amount of holding cells in the city. "I tell people if they want to smoke do it anywhere but the rally," said Downing. "Walk a block from the rally to smoke and be 10 times safer." Downing says the Freedom Rally is falsely slapped with the label of "Hempfest," which is a festival that takes place in Seattle, and sees it as a subtle attack on the event. "The truth is the name Hempfest belongs to an event in Seattle," he said. "Not calling [the Freedom Rally] by the right name is another form of disrespect." Larry Shaffer does think Amherst is more accepting of an event celebrating an illegal substance than other towns would be. "Amherst does have an independent streak," he said. "We really don't want to be in anyone else's business. I see it as a matter of personal preference." Shaffer also mentioned that marijuana is nothing new to him, and it wouldn't surprise - or bother - him to see someone enjoying the herb at an event like Extravaganja. "Young people may find it hard to believe, but there was marijuana a long time ago," he said. Arsenault, who has lived in Amherst his whole life, attended Extravaganja as a child, long before he became a member of the CRC his freshmen year at the University of Massachusetts. He spent his childhood believing the event happened everywhere. "There's definitely a really, really strong liberal community here in Amherst," he said. "I actually grew up thinking all towns had Extravaganja. It was a regular thing to me. I thought it was a normal national event, but sadly that's not the case." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom