Pubdate: Mon, 21 Feb 2011 Source: Daily Princetonian (NJ Edu) Copyright: 2011 Daily Princetonian Publishing Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.dailyprincetonian.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3735 REFORMING THE MARIJUANA POLICY Last week, columnist Aaron Applbaum argued that the possession of marijuana should be legalized in the United States. Further, he suggested in passing that even if the government does not heed his call the University should at least modify its own marijuana policy. The editorial board endorses the latter claim. The University should cease its current policy of imposing disciplinary consequences on students found in possession of marijuana in excess of those regulations required by law. As was well-argued last week, the legal prohibition on marijuana use is simply silly. Marijuana is less addictive and less dangerous to health than both alcohol and tobacco, two commonly used legal drugs; in the absence of prohibitions against those drugs there is no good reason for the government to forbid individuals from using marijuana as well. In general, the University may have a variety of good reasons for enacting regulations that mirror law. Many laws actually do promote health, safety or public order. When a law is as pointless as the marijuana prohibition, however - when the prohibited conduct isn't harmful to individual students or to the University community - the University lacks a good reason to ensure student compliance. There already exist numerous local, state and federal government agencies unnecessarily tasked with regulating marijuana use; the University need not add its name to the list. Of course, it is important that the University avoid legal liability. The editorial board does not suggest that the University simply ignore marijuana use on campus. Rather, the University should reform its marijuana policy along the lines of the current alcohol policy, reducing penalties for infractions and emphasizing the confiscation of prohibited drugs rather than the imposition of punishments on students. Currently, students found in possession of marijuana for the first time are automatically put on probation, which then becomes part of the student's permanent record. Mere possession of alcohol - even by someone under the legal age limit - carries no penalty at all, and first-time violations of the alcohol policy do not require such a penalty. Furthermore, as many readers are no doubt aware, the Public Safety officers who enforce the alcohol policy have substantial discretion in responding to violations; frequently, officers will confiscate alcohol but will not report the violator to University disciplinary officials for further sanctions. The University should lower the penalties imposed for violating the marijuana policy to the standard set by the alcohol policy and instruct officers who encounter students in possession of marijuana to focus on confiscation alone. Such a scheme would enable the University to discharge any legal obligation it might have to! stop the illegal possession of marijuana on campus while limiting the unnecessary exercise of disciplinary power. Alcohol, after all, is both more dangerous and the cause of more campus disorder than is marijuana; it is rather odd that the latter would carry more severe disciplinary consequences than the former. As long as laws against marijuana possession are on the books, the drug will have some role in the University's regulations. Rather than the current system of regulation, however, the University should model the marijuana policy on the alcohol policy. While the University should not violate the law, it should do its best to ensure that as few students as possible must suffer for something as unobjectionable as marijuana possession. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D