Pubdate: Fri, 28 May 2010 Source: Gazette, The (Colorado Springs, CO) Copyright: 2010 The Gazette Contact: http://www.gazette.com/sections/opinion/submitletter/ Website: http://www.gazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/165 Author: Andrea Brown DARE TO JUST SAY NO/YES/MAYBE TO MARIJAUNA Claudia Varas moved to Colorado Springs from Florida four years ago to raise her three kids in a conservative bubble. "In Florida, it is a very happy, party state," Varas said. "I didn't think it was the right atmosphere for children." Little did she know she was arriving at the dawn of the new age of the Rocky Mountain high. She wouldn't have moved here, Varas said, had she known about Amendment 20, which legalized medical marijuana 10 years ago. Usage was rare until last year when federal authorities announced they would not enforce pot laws in Colorado. Ever since, more than 100 pot shops opened around town. Varas responded to a Gazette request for readers to tell how they feel about the medical marijuana dichotomy: the legal use of an illegal drug and the message it sends to kids schooled in DARE to Just Say No. "It is kind of being hypocritical," said Varas' son, Ludovic Funfrock, 17. "I think if they want it for medical reasons, they should have the government or designated people grow it. "They are putting the task of producing it in the wrong hands." The issue is an emotional one and advocates of medical marijuana are vocal. But Varas has tried to make her voice heard. "I wrote to my representatives," she said. "I wrote to the governor. I want it out of the neighborhoods." Nine-year-old Allyson Reeder, 9, a fourth grader, said the pot shops "kind of" send a double message about marijuana. But it doesn't confuse her. "I know drugs are wrong," Allyson said. "But marijuana is kind of an exception, because it can help people. Other drugs make it worse." Other youth interviewed echoed the sympathetic "if it helps people" side of marijuana, expressing approval of the drug for medical use if it made people feel better while at the same time distinguishing this from recreational use warned against in school. The seeming contradiction is not lost on recent high school graduate Robert Jensin, 18, who hangs out at a Rockrimmon neighborhood shopping plaza where a pot shop recently opened. "It's definitely a mixed message," Jensin said. But, he said, it's OK because it's "just marijuana," not heroin. "The drug of choice is pot," he said. "People are going to do it anyway. Why not make it legal so they don't have to go to jail?" Despite the heated debate, many of those interviewed around town had no strong opinions. Some had not given it much thought. Others said it didn't affect their daily lives. A few were ambivalent about its use but had definite ideas about controlling access to it. "I'd rather have it regulated like that than have drug dealers all over the place," said Mary Jane Hayes as she unloaded her two preschoolers from the minivan outside a north-side library. "If it helps people get off drugs that have bad side effects, I think it's fine." Laurilyn Gregerson, a mother of three, also opposes the distribution method of medical marijuana. The issue hits home with her because of a neighborhood dispensary two doors from the bead shop frequented by her 14-year-old daughter. "She walks the other way around now. It is a concern. I don't know necessarily that everybody going in there has a legitimate medical concern," Gregerson said. "This is something that should be at a pharmacy or a hospital. Treat it that way. Combine it with medical stuff so my kids can get that really clear message. It's not a clear message to kids." So, she tries to clear up the smokescreen. "We've had dinner time discussions about it." That is exactly what officials are urging parents, including Varas, to do. Consider what Varas heard in a response to her email to Gov. Bill Ritter. "His response," she said, "was we need to educate our children." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D