Pubdate: Wed, 27 Oct 2010 Source: Lumberjack, The (CA Edu) Copyright: 2010 The Lumberjack Newspaper, Humboldt State Univesity Contact: http://www.thejackonline.org/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2736 Author: Nicholas Preciado Cited: Proposition 19 http://yeson19.com/ Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/find?272 (Proposition 19) PROPOSITION 19: POSSIBLE PERMISSIBLE POT If you've been secretly smoking your spliff, chill out. By this time next week, it could be legal. Proposition 19, the Regulate, Control, and Tax Cannabis Act of 2010 would legalize marijuana in California. Anyone over the age of 21 will be able to possess and grow marijuana for his personal use. If the Proposition passes, it will allow the state and local governments to regulate and tax cannabis. The governments will also oversee production, distribution, and sale. Legalization supporters say it could lead to hundreds of millions of dollars annually in taxes. Humboldt County's Board of Supervisors endorsed Proposition 19. "It's a waste of government money to try to lock up everyone with pot," said Lacey Palmer, a junior psychology major. Those who oppose Proposition 19 say that if passed, it will encourage drug use, promote driving under the influence, and endanger the safety of communities and the workplace. Federal funding for schools and businesses would also be at risk. Tristan Irving, a sophomore journalism major, said that although he thinks Proposition 19 would help California financially, he can't see it passing. "I think, if California passes it, the rest of the United States will blow it out of proportion," said Irving. Irving said that Proposition 19 would just be another way for the government and corporations to control people and their recreational choices. University Police Chief Thomas Dewey also opposes Proposition 19. He said that even if the proposition passes, the Humboldt State housing and campus policies will not change. "There is no mandate that a university must allow on its grounds every type of personal conduct that is permitted in other areas of our society," said Dewey. "Humboldt State will continue to prohibit marijuana on campus and to cite, arrest, and sanction students on campus with marijuana, since it remains in violation of federal law." This leads to the biggest roadblock for supporters of Proposition 19: the federal government. Even if California voters make marijuana legal, it will still be illegal on the federal level. If the University goes against federal law and allows marijuana use on campus, it would lose its federal funding, which goes toward grants, financial aid for students, and programs. Dewey said the deputy director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy and the director of the National Marijuana Initiative conveyed this to both city and University leaders in a meeting with. "In that meeting, we were told by these federal officials that if Humboldt State University did not want to jeopardize the federal funds," said Dewey, "we must follow the federal law that marijuana is a Schedule-1 controlled substance as per the United States Code." Economics professor Thomas Bruner said that Proposition 19 is a social statement and a representation of shifting generational attitudes toward marijuana, more than a law that has a chance of passing. "The only significant effect could possibly be a shift in the attitude associated with the risk of producing marijuana," said Bruner. It looks like a tough battle for those who support Proposition 19. Even if it passes, there is still the federal government to fight. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake