Pubdate: Thu, 15 Oct 2009 Source: Valley Advocate (Easthampton, MA) Copyright: 2009 New Mass Media Contact: http://www.valleyadvocate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1520 Author: Maureen Turner LEGALIZE IT? A Northampton Lawyer Brings A Bill To Tax And Regulate Pot To The Statehouse. In 1981, Dick Evans, a Northampton attorney and long-time advocate for drug law reform, drafted a marijuana legalization bill "just to see what one would look like," he said. Evans got the bill before the state Legislature via the right to petition, a law that allows citizens to file bills. And because he found a legislator to file the bill on his behalf—improbably enough, it was Andrew Card, who went on to serve as chief of staff to George W. Bush but at the time was a progressive Republican state rep from eastern Mass.—it was guaranteed a committee hearing. The day of the hearing, Evans said, "I loaded a few friends in the car and we drove down to Boston." When they arrived, they found the room packed with anti-drug parents' groups and other opponents. Evans offered his testimony in support of the bill, then the opponents offered theirs. "Then the chairman of the committee looked at his watch and said, 'I think we heard enough. Let's put this to a vote. All in favor say "Aye."' "My friends and I jumped up and said 'Aye!'" Evans said. Then the committee chair asked for those opposed to say "nay." "The building shook," Evans recalled with a laugh. "Bang went the gavel, and that was it for 28 years." This week, Evans once again traveled to Boston to make the case for a marijuana legalization bill he drafted, at an Oct. 14 hearing of the Joint Committee on Revenue. Like the one he filed 28 years ago, this bill calls for the regulation of commercial growing and sale of marijuana, and would impose an excise tax on the product. While Evans does not expect the bill to fast-track into law, he does hope it will spark a healthy, honest public discussion about marijuana, in a way that was not possible back in 1981. What's changed, he said, is the growing acknowledgement of what he calls an "indisputable fact": "Marijuana in our culture is ubiquitous, and it is ineradicable. That may not have been so clear 28 years ago," Evans said. Today, he noted, references to casual pot smoking are everywhere in pop culture. Just last month, he noted, the Today show—inspired by an article in Marie Claire magazine with the unfortunate title "Stiletto Stoners"—ran a segment in which successful middle-class women with careers and families talked about their recreational pot use. Matt Lauer may have feigned surprise, Evans said, but the stories rang true for many Americans, including those who flooded the show's website with testimonials of their own pot use. Marijuana use crosses all kinds of boundaries in the United States, Evans argued: class, race, region, educational background. "It's something that almost everybody has in common—something the NASCAR [fans] and the liberal elites have in common," he said. "Whether you like it or not, we're beyond the point of whether marijuana is good or bad," Evans said. "The policy makers can't recognize that for some reason." But it's time, he said, to undo the current punitive pot laws and replace them with a more practical approach. * Evans' "Act to Regulate and Tax the Cannabis Industry" calls for the legal sale of marijuana by licensed vendors, who, along with growers and distributors, would be overseen by a state Cannabis Control Board. The board would have seven part-time paid members appointed by the governor. Under the bill, cannabis could be sold in quantities of one ounce, in sealed containers that identify the grower and the grade and include a warning about driving under the influence. (The bill would have no effect on existing laws about driving while impaired.) Buyers would have to be at least 21 years old, and sales via vending machines would be prohibited. The pot could not contain additives, or be part of a beverage or snack food. Small-scale "backyard" growers would not be taxed or regulated, in the same way home beer brewers are not regulated by state alcohol laws. Indeed, the bill bears a strong resemblance to the laws that regulate alcohol sales in the state. Evans' bill would also impose a steep excise tax on marijuana sales, ranging from $150 to $250 per ounce, depending on its grade (the amount of Delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, it contains). That last provision is especially relevant given the current dismal state of Massachusetts' economy. Regulating and taxing marijuana could have significant fiscal benefits for the commonwealth, supporters contend. A much-cited 2003 study by Harvard University economist Jeffrey Miron concluded that legalizing pot would save Massachusetts $120.6 million a year, the cost of arresting and prosecuting people on marijuana charges. (That figure was often pointed to by supporters of Question 2, the 2008 ballot question that decriminalized the possession of less than an ounce of marijuana.) Miron's report also found that legalization could generate almost $17 million a year in tax revenue for the state. "Legalization has its economic advantages and attractive prospects, but it's more than that," Evans said. "It's ending the terrible injustice of prohibition, under which people have been so brutalized for turning to cannabis, when the government is urging them to use lethal drugs like alcohol and nicotine." The bill, he went on, would also force an honest discussion about what constitutes marijuana use, and what constitutes abuse. "Under prohibition, we necessarily conflate use and abuse," he said. But our legal system has found ways to draw the line between use and abuse, and between responsible and irresponsible use, with other legal drugs, including alcohol. * Like Evans, Terry Franklin of Amherst is a long-time advocate of marijuana reform, working with the UMass Cannabis Reform Coalition and organizing his town's annual Extravaganja festival. He's also active in libertarian politics—not an unusual position for drug law reformers, many of whom make the case that the government shouldn't stick its nose into what people do in their private lives if those activities don't hurt others. Still, Franklin told the Advocate, "Regulation is the buzzword these days, especially in this state, so I don't see any way around it." And, he added, "Suffering under regulation and taxation is much better than having people taken away in chains and put in cages." Should a marijuana taxation bill ever pass, Franklin said, "I hope the tax level ... isn't so excessive that the criminal justice industry merely turns the War on Drugs into the War on Tax Evasion." A provision allowing the growth of marijuana for personal use (which Evans' bill includes) "would alleviate some of the problems," Franklin noted. While the Oct. 14 hearing focused on the bill's potential tax implications, there are broader issues to consider, Franklin added. "Marijuana use is a de facto spiritual practice for a great number of its proponents, regardless of whether they think of it in those terms or not," he said. "And while people may view any particular religion (or all religion) as silly and worthy of mockery, many are still accepting of religious freedom as good public policy, if only because of the effort and cost to society of engaging in religious suppression." The bill could also force politicians into taking public positions on the issue. "That way voters can make an informed choice come election time," Franklin said. He pointed, for example, to the heated Democratic primary race for the U.S. Senate seat left vacant by the death of Ted Kennedy. "The two top contenders, [Attorney General] Martha Coakley and [U.S. Rep.] Mike Capuano, have radically different positions," Franklin noted. "Ms. Coakley opposed [Question 2], and has worked to undermine it since passage." (Coakley has encouraged municipalities to impose additional fines for public pot smoking, on top of the $100 civil fine for minor possession that was approved by 65 percent of voters on the November ballot question.) Capuano, in contrast, is a co-sponsor of a national decriminalization bill, filed by Massachusetts U.S. Rep. Barney Frank and Rep. Ron Paul, a Texas Republican. "I hope the voters are paying attention," Franklin said. * The Oct. 14 Revenue Committee hearing (which took place after the Advocate went to press) was not the only opportunity for debate about the legalization bill. A Senate version of the bill is due for its own hearing before the Judiciary Committee sometime before March, Evans said. The current bill was filed for Evans by two Amherst Democratic legislators: Ellen Story in the House and Stan Rosenberg in the Senate. While Evans said he hasn't asked either to endorse the bill, he's grateful to them for taking the steps to ensure that it gets a hearing. And, by law, that's all the bill is guaranteed: a public hearing. Evans doesn't expect the Legislature to move his proposal any further; after the hearing, he said, "they don't have to do anything. They probably won't." But he does hope the effort will spark serious, substantive conversation about ending a failed policy of prohibition and replacing it with a thoughtful system of regulation. "I'm not trying to legalize marijuana so much as legalize discussion about it," Evans said. Right now, he said, many casual pot smokers remain in the closet; supporters of his efforts sometimes tell him they worry that if they publicly admitted to smoking, it might offend their employer, or give their ex-spouse ammunition in a custody hearing. Meanwhile, "For the most part, whenever the press covers this issue, [the coverage is] littered with puns and smirks," he said. "It's my hope this will spark some discussion," he added. "It's my hope that some legislators will take some leadership on this issue. I want to see the silence broken. I want to see the press pick up on it." Evans expected a range of supporters at the recent hearing, including activists, medical professionals and law enforcement representatives who advocate for reforming drug laws. While last year's Question 2 was fiercely opposed by the state's district attorneys and a number of police chiefs, Evans said he doesn't know of any organized opposition to his bill. "This isn't on their radar screen," he said. But to those who do oppose the bill, Evans issues a challenge: to find a better alternative to the existing costly, punitive and ineffective prohibition model. "How many more people have to be arrested and prosecuted and punished before we can hope to reach some level of success in this struggle against marijuana?" Evans asked. "And once we reach that success, how many people are going to be locked up in jail? And how much is that going to cost taxpayers, and where is that money going to come from?" Regulation and taxation of marijuana, he said, could achieve the goals that prohibition was supposed to achieve: protecting public health and safety, reducing abuse and the crimes associated with drug trafficking. "What I'm saying—and I'm certainly not alone in this—is there's another way to approach those problems," Evans said. "And oh, by the way, there's some significant economic opportunities that might present.... "What we have to talk about now is the obsolescence of prohibition," he said. "We no longer have the luxury of chasing a failed program. We've failed; let's move on." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr