Pubdate: Sun, 19 Jul 2009 Source: Naples Daily News (FL) Copyright: 2009 Naples Daily News Contact: http://www.naplesnews.com/send-a-letter/ Website: http://www.naplesnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/284 Author: Maria Victoria Delgado, Ph.D / Executive Director, Drug Free Collier Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal) MEDICAL MARIJUANA? LET'S NOT GO THERE Recently Michael Neibauer, a staff writer for Examiner.com, provided an update regarding the U.S. House Appropriations Subcommittee that has lifted a long-standing budget rider banning the District of Columbia government from spending any money to decriminalize marijuana. The Financial Services Panel, which has oversight of Washington, has removed from the 2010 budget the 11-year-old language that outlaws the district's use of federal or local funds to legalize marijuana or reduce penalties for its possession or distribution. Neibauer reported on comments from Bruce Mirken, spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project. Mirken had been working with Congress for several years to remove the language regarding outlawing the use of federal, or local funds to legalize pot and to reduce penalties. Mirken has great hopes that it will happen this year. There have been numerous attempts in the past 10 years to legalize and decriminalize marijuana. California is leading the way. A person can now walk into a specialty shop and purchase marijuana for medicinal purposes. Medicinal purposes can mean that the prescription is for a litany of ailments that range from anxiety to zoophobia (intense fear of animals). Just as there are doctors who prescribe several hundred oxycodone pills for their patients' back pain, there are physicians who believe that marijuana is more effective and less damaging to patients than prescriptions in pill form. Niebauer provides the balanced perspective from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. The DEA is firmly against the legalization of marijuana, as it considers lifting spending restrictions and decriminalizing marijuana will encourage a greater tolerance for drug use. Smoked marijuana "has not withstood the rigors of science -- it is not medicine and it is not safe," the DEA argues. On the other hand, a 2004 Dutch study compared marijuana use in the Netherlands and the United States. Researchers found no evidence that decriminalization of marijuana would lead to increased drug use. The results suggested that drug policies may have less impact on marijuana use than is currently thought. The Netherlands decriminalized marijuana use in 1976, and it is available for purchase in small quantities by adults in licensed coffee shops. As Americans, do we want our children to have access to marijuana as easily as they have access to alcohol? Collier County's youth start drinking alcoholic beverages in middle school and 44 percent of our high-school students have had alcohol in the past 30 days. Seventeen percent of Collier County's high-school students report that they have smoked marijuana in the past 30 days. Both statistics are alarming and make you wonder if marijuana were as easily accessible as alcohol, would more youth smoke marijuana and in some cases abuse both at the same rate. Additionally, studies regarding the effects of alcohol on adults and youth have been conducted for at least three centuries. We do not have the same breadth of research for marijuana. It was only in 2008 that the National Institute on Drug Abuse began the first comprehensive study of marijuana addiction by examining the neurobiological effects of marijuana use. We do know that marijuana, like any other drug, can become the focal point of a person's life -- especially in an adolescent's life. As executive director of Drug Free Collier, a community coalition dedicated to the prevention of juvenile substance abuse, I urge Collier County residents to voice their opposition to the legalization of marijuana by contacting their legislators. Collier County has over 45,000 students who deserve to live in a drug-free and safe environment. You can find a list of your local government representatives by logging on to our Web site, on www.Drugfree Collier.org and selecting the tab for "community." If you wish to learn more about Drug Free Collier, please contact me at (239) 377-0535. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake