Pubdate: Sat, 11 Apr 2009 Source: Daily Hampshire Gazette (MA) Copyright: 2009 Daily Hampshire Gazette Contact: http://www.dailyhampshiregazette.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/106 Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09/n000/a079.html Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09/n000/a078.html Author: Robert Merkin FORGET FINES, JUST LEGALIZE AND TAX MARIJUANA SALES To the editor: The Gazette's editorial "New Revenue Ideas" (26 March) is the "Dumber" that follows the "Dumb" decision by the Springfield City Council's to raise punitive, anti-Sin fines on adults caught with less than one ounce of marijuana. Springfield has a long, consistent history of dumb and dangerous drug policy decisions. Now The Gazette asks Northampton to follow Springfield's latest foot-shooting idea. Statewide, voters Just Said No to a lifelong criminal record for adult possession of marijuana. Their votes embraced the $100 civil fine, but gave no sign of demanding higher fines, either as revenue boosters or (as the editorial wrote) as "a good way to discourage the public use of the drug." Such "revenue ideas" confuse the fundamental "protect and serve" mission of police with the task of raising revenue. This can lead to to unspoken quotas, and promotions of officers who write the most tickets. Police pressured by money-desperate cities soon drift into a very different mission: "To Protect and Collect," as The Kansas City Star's investigation into such nationwide practices called it. But Dumb and Dumber was followed March 27 by Authentically Smart: One Page 1 Northampton lawyer Richard Evans' proposed state law to legalize, supervise and tax adult marijuana use - exactly as we supervise and heavily tax adult alcohol and tobacco use today. In 1933, in the depths of the Great Depression, we took alcohol back from the violent criminal gangs who had paid no taxes on their huge profits. Prohibition had made law, law enforcement and government the nation's laughing stock. We stopped making criminals of every adult who drank a beer or glass of whiskey. Hard Times are back, and governments are desperate for revenue. We can seek it the Dumb and Dangerous way -- or we can actually find the revenue we need the Smart way. Robert Merkin Florence - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake