Pubdate: Wed, 7 Jan 2009
Source: Morgan County Herald (OH)
Contact:  2009 Morgan County Herald
Website: http://mchnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4924
Author: Stephen Wallace
Note: Stephen Wallace, national chairman of SADD and author of the 
new book Reality Gap: Alcohol, Drugs, and Sex-What Parents Don't Know 
and Teens Aren't Telling, has broad experience as a school 
psychologist and adolescent counselor. For more information about 
SADD, visit sadd.org. For more information about Stephen Wallace, 
visit www.stephengraywallace.com.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Marijuana - Popular)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?224 (Marijuana and Driving)

A Clear and Present Danger

MARIJUANA AND THE MARGINALIZATION OF PREVENTION

Dealing a blow to years of work and recent gains in youth drug 
prevention, Massachusetts has joined a growing, but still short, list 
of states to decriminalize marijuana possession. At least that is the 
intention of some 65 percent of voters checking "Yes" on a ballot 
initiative that makes possession of an ounce or less of marijuana a 
civil offense (punishable by a ticket) as opposed to a criminal one. 
And this on the same day that the same voters approved a ban on 
greyhound racing.

Protect the dogs but throw the kids under the bus. Go figure.

Indeed, opponents of the ballot initiative - which include state 
constitutional officers, district attorneys, police chiefs, 
ministers, school superintendents, and major newspapers - say, "We 
believe that efforts to legalize drugs of any kind represent the 
wrong direction for Massachusetts and put our children, our families, 
and our communities at risk."

For its part, the Committee for Sensible Marijuana Policy, which 
backed the measure, points proudly to the monetary savings for police 
departments, never mind the total national economic cost of drug 
abuse of $254.8 billion in 2008 or the obvious cost shifting to an 
already overburdened health care system. For example, Massachusetts' 
Coalition for Safe Streets says that marijuana is already a primary 
factor in juvenile ER admissions.

And emergency department episodes involving marijuana almost tripled 
from 1994 to 2002, according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health 
Services Administration (SAMHSA), which reports that marijuana is the 
most widely used illicit drug in America. In fact, of all youths ages 
12-17 in drug treatment in 2000, nearly 62 percent had a primary 
marijuana diagnosis.

But dollars don't equal sense in this equation. What really matters 
is the health and safety of our children.

Marijuana smoke contains 50 to 70 percent more carcinogenic 
hydrocarbons than does tobacco smoke, increasing the risk of chronic 
cough, bronchitis, and emphysema, as well as cancer of the head, 
neck, and lungs. It also leads to changes in the brain similar to 
those caused by cocaine and heroin.

In addition, marijuana use affects alertness, concentration, 
perception, and reaction time, all critical to the safe operation of 
automobiles.

Yet, alarmingly, SADD research has shown that young people tend to 
underestimate the dangers of drugged driving, with 15 percent of teen 
drivers reporting having operated a car under the influence of marijuana.

Other risks, including deteriorating school performance, disrupted 
relationships, depression, suicide, and crime, can't be overlooked.

Our kids deserve clear, unambiguous messages about the dangers 
associated with marijuana, the very type of messages that have helped 
drive down use among Massachusetts high school and middle school 
students from 50 percent to 41 percent since 2001.

On a national level, annual prevalence of marijuana use has fallen 33 
percent among eighth-graders and 25 percent among 10th-graders during 
the same time period.

And that is important because turning back the tide of progress in 
youth drug prevention is not only a Massachusetts issue, but rather 
one that threatens kids everywhere - especially with other loosening 
of restrictions on marijuana use being proposed in Congress.

Some supporters of decriminalization point to statistics showing that 
relaxed laws have not led to an increase in marijuana use (even 
though 65 percent of students in the SADD study cited the law as the 
number one reason why they choose not to use drugs). Interesting 
considering that SAMHSA reports half the states with the highest 
percentage of new youth marijuana users have medical marijuana programs.

But debates over the data aside, shouldn't our focus remain on 
reducing use, not on maintaining the status quo?

In What Americans Need to Know About Marijuana, the Office of 
National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) shoots holes in a series of 
"myths" that no doubt perpetuate drug use by young people and 
embolden even caring adults to send the message that smoking weed is 
really no big deal. Among them:

. Marijuana is harmless.

. Marijuana is not addictive.

. Youth experimentation with marijuana is inevitable.

In their place, ONDCP advocates for a closer examination of the 
facts, including the incredibly powerful role that parents can play 
in keeping their kids drug-free by staying involved, setting limits, 
and enforcing consequences.

The importance of empowered parents in reducing youth drug use cannot 
be overstated, especially in the face of well-funded state and 
national campaigns to decriminalize the potent presence of marijuana 
in too many young lives. It is, without a doubt, a clear and present danger.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake