Pubdate: Tue, 22 Dec 2009 Source: State Journal-Register (IL) Copyright: 2009 The State Journal-Register Contact: http://service.sj-r.com/forms/letters.asp Website: http://www.sj-r.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/425 Author: Deana Poole Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular) IS CITY'S DRUG POSSESSION ORDINANCE A BUST? More than 10 months ago, Springfield aldermen changed the rules so getting caught with a small amount of marijuana or drug paraphernalia wouldn't automatically result in a criminal record. But since that Feb. 3 vote, city police haven't issued any ordinance violations for those two offenses, instead opting to continue to cite people under the state statute, which makes it a crime. That means the change, pushed by Ward 2 Ald. Gail Simpson largely as a way to generate money for the city, which faces a multimillion-dollar budget crisis, hasn't brought in any extra revenue. Simpson, who has asked for status updates periodically in recent months, said she didn't realize that not a single ordinance violation had been issued. However, Springfield police say that so far this year, 335 people were cited for possession of marijuana under 2.5 grams, and 219 people were ticketed for possession of drug paraphernalia, under the state statute. Based on a fine of $300 for each offense, that conceivably could have generated $166,200 for city coffers. "I'm not real concerned about it," Simpson said. "I view it as a long-term process. I prefer that they go into it with all the police officers being on the same page in terms of what they are supposed to be doing, and everybody writing the tickets on the same ordinance, not some writing on the state and some writing on the city ordinance." Springfield Deputy Chief Doug Williamson said the department had received a new batch of forms for writing tickets just before the February vote. Given the tight budget situation, the department opted to use those tickets before ordering new ones to reflect the changes the city council approved. Officers still had the option to check the "other" box and cite the offenses as ordinance violations, Williamson said, but all opted to cite under state law because it's easier since most have the statute memorized. The department is in the process of ordering new tickets, he said. Simpson's proposal, which was approved by a 7-3 vote, originally began as a way to generate money for the city when in the midst of a $12.5 million budget shortfall. At the time, she also said it would be good for "those individuals who do silly things and get in trouble, but they're not going to be stigmatized." [SIDEBAR] State law Under state law, possession of marijuana under 2.5 grams is a Class C misdemeanor that comes with a maximum fine of $1,500. Getting cited under the city's ordinance comes with a $300 fine. Possession of drug paraphernalia, under state statute, is a Class A misdemeanor, punishable with a $750 fine minimum. Under city ordinance, the fine is $300. Tickets at a glance Number of tickets written by Springfield Police Department, under state law: Possession of cannabis -- under 2.5 grams * 2009 (to date): 335 * 2008: 293 Possession of drug paraphernalia * 2009 (to date): 219 * 2008: 231 Source: Springfield Police Department - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom