Pubdate: Thu, 15 Apr 2010 Source: East Carolinian (NC Edu) Copyright: 2010 The East Carolinian Contact: http://www.theeastcarolinian.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/774 Author: Will Hiebert MILLION MARIJUANA MARCH HAVING TROUBLE WITH PERMITS The creators of the Greenville Million Marijuana March Facebook event, which over 7,000 ECU students and Greenville locals have been invited to, are having troubles getting the permits required for the event. The Greenville Million Marijuana March is scheduled for Sunday, May 2, from "high noon to 4:20 p.m." at the Mendenhall Brickyard and will have a picnic, T-shirts and variety of live music from alternative rock to experimental death metal to hip-hop. Bands include An Eternity Incognito, Consume the Stars, HNL, Jakeleg, En Serenade and many others. Since anywhere from a couple hundred to a couple thousand students can come out to the event, permits to march and to solicit funds are needed, but were not granted. According to Associate Vice Chancellor of Environmental Health, Safety, and Parking and Transportation, Bill Koch, their permit wasn't granted because the ECU Police Department "doesn't have a mechanism for approving marches. We have done some quiet marches, but no protest marches. My concern with the march is for safety of the marchers and impeding traffic/operations. Although the event occurs on a weekend, it also occurs during exam week and we need to be respectful of those students who are studying." In a phone interview with Koch, he said that ECU PD was contacting N.C. State's and Chapel Hill's Police Departments to try to get the protocol for protest marches. The solicitation of funds permit was not granted on the grounds that the funds would not be collected by a charitable organization. This came only a few days before the city denied permits for the Riverwalk Block Party. The event's creators, ECU junior communication major Chelsea Burdette and sophomore marketing major David Price, aren't laying down lightly though. Price said that other marches have happened on campus before. He also said that since PayPal donations aren't regulated by the city, he doesn't need a funds solicitation permit to take donations on his Web site, davidsdogma.com. The donated money goes to renting equipment, buying food and T-shirts and getting permits so the live music they have scheduled can play. Burdette and Price, who both identify themselves as Libertarians and are active members of College Libertarians, which is the campus organization hosting the event. Although the libertarians are hosting the event, the Greenville Medicinal Marijuana March is a part of a worldwide movement called the Global Marijuana March, which has 279 marches organized in almost every country around the world for the weekend of the May 1 and 2. Tuesday, April 13 was the one-year anniversary of the Medicinal Marijuana Act bill getting stopped in the Health Committee of the North Carolina General Assembly. Burdette and Price's event was aimed at educating the public about the legalization of marijuana so that the next time a marijuana legalization bill gets introduced, it will have more popular support. Physician and chair of the Health Committee, Rep. Bob England, said, "It certainly was a well written and exceptionally researched document. I am a physician as well as a legislator, so I understand the subject of medicinal use; therefore, I accept the discussion to continue to explore the medicinal purposes. We will now have to wait to see the next step taken by Rep. Jones." The bill that failed would have allowed patients with a variety of serious health issues with symptoms that include "severe pain, severe nausea, anorexia, seizures or severe and persistent muscle spasms" to have up to 24 ounces of "usable plant." This bill wouldn't have been enough for Burdette or Price, who seek universal legalization and authority to grow personal marijuana instead of having to purchasing from a dispensary, which is a company that would purchase usable marijuana from people with a government-issued marijuana production license and sell it to people with a prescription. North Carolina would have been the 15th state to legalize medicinal marijuana. The bill would have provided protection for students by stating that no school or employer may refuse to enroll or employ a person based on medical marijuana use, but would still ban marijuana use in public places in the state, including schools. The UNC school system would have created the Medicinal Cannabis Research Program under the provisions in the bill, which would study the usefulness and safety of medical marijuana, as well as quality control, purity and labeling standards. According to the 2009 ECU Police Safety report, over the last three years, the ECU Police Department has arrested 200 people and issued 152 citations for drug law violations. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake