Pubdate: Tue, 28 May 2013
Source: Gay City News (NY)
Copyright: 2013 Gay City News
Contact:  http://www.gaycitynews.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3651
Author: Nathan Riley

LIZ KRUEGER PRESSING FOR POT LEGALIZATION

East Side Senator Leads Forum Co-Sponsored by Many Fellow Manhattan 
Democratic Lawmakers

Draft provisions of a "tax and regulate" marijuana bill is being 
circulated by State Senator Liz Krueger, an East Side Democrat.

Washington State and Colorado enacted such laws last year in 
referendums that make the recreational use of cannabis legal. The 
voters in these two western states accepted the argument that 
legalization makes sense after weighing the risks of marijuana use 
against the benefits of increased revenue.

Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance that 
is helping to draft the new bill, explained that popular acceptance 
of marijuana has followed a path similar to that of marriage equality 
- - with support steadily growing since the 1990s. A 2011 Gallup Poll 
showed 50 percent of Americans supporting legalization. The strongest 
supporters are 18 to 29-year-olds. Seniors over 65 are the least 
supportive. Democrats and liberals poll the highest in favor of a new 
direction.

East Side state senator leads forum co-sponsored by many fellow 
Manhattan Democratic lawmakers

The two recent referendums confirmed these polling results, 
especially Colorado, where legalized marijuana outpolled President 
Barack Obama, who won the state, by 60,000 votes. Nadelmann said that 
the Colorado referendum returns suggest that legalization could 
become a factor in next year's gubernatorial election.

Krueger opened a May 15 forum on marijuana policy at Baruch College 
by saying, "I did smoke and inhale marijuana 30 years ago, and I have 
no plans to do it again." She emphasized that she does not advocate 
pot use and would no more encourage young people to indulge than do 
countries like the Netherlands and Portugal that have decriminalized the drug.

The Krueger proposal would allow the legal use of marijuana by those 
over 18. Sales would be supervised by the State Liquor Authority, and 
retail outlets for marijuana would be subjects to the same sorts of 
restrictions that currently apply to bars and liquor stores - 
including prohibitions on proximity to schools and churches. A $50 
tax would be levied on an ounce of marijuana, and local governments 
would have the option to add an additional five percent surcharge or 
to forbid its sale.

Nadelmann stressed that marijuana legalization is not an invitation 
to "turn on and tune out," and he acknowledged that a revival of the 
days of "wake and bake" - when 10 percent of high school students 
were daily users of marijuana - could doom the effort at reform. 
Under the Krueger bill, youngsters would face civil sanctions for 
using and selling marijuana.

Dr. Julie Holland, the former head of emergency medicine at Bellevue 
Hospital and author of popular books on pot and ecstasy, said that 
cannabis is a natural ingredient in plants and humans and its use as 
a medicine would be approved if the US government looked at the 
question rationally and without political considerations. The 
National Institute for Drug Abuse, a government agency, only supports 
research that will show the harms of marijuana. Holland acknowledged, 
however, that marijuana is associated with risk for some adolescents 
during the several years after 18 when their brains have fully grown 
and the synapses should be forming more efficient connections. For 
those youth susceptible to manic depression or schizophrenia, pot use 
can aggravate their problems during this period.

Joanne Naughton, a retired New York City police lieutenant and a 
member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, or LEAP, strongly 
backed the Krueger legislation. Prohibition, she said, is "a failed 
policy." At the same time, she reminded those attending the Baruch 
forum that police departments are quasi-military organizations in 
which policies are set at the top and carried out down a chain of 
command. The mayor and police commissioner are the ones responsible 
for the staggering rates of stop and frisk arrests for minor 
marijuana possession, not the officers on the streets.

A draft memorandum from Krueger noted that the NYPD made 50,300 
marijuana-related arrests in 2010- which constituted 14 percent of 
all arrests that year. Those arrested were almost all people of color 
who received a criminal record for a first-time non-violent crime. 
This policing cost the city $75 million. Colorado estimates it would 
earn up to $22 million in taxes from its new law, and New York has a 
population nearly four times its size.

Alfred Carrasquillo, a community organizer for drug reform, spent 
time in jail for marijuana possession and failing drug tests for 
weed. He told the Baruch audience about his life in the "system" from 
14 to 18. He attributed his fate to one factor: "racism."

The forum Krueger convened was co-sponsored by State Senator Brad 
Hoylman, Assemblymen Richard Gottfried, Brian Kavanagh, Micah 
Kellner, and Dan Quart, and City Councilmembers Dan Garodnick and 
Jessica Lapin. Krueger was the only elected official who attended, 
and there is not yet a formal draft of her legislation.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom