Pubdate: Fri, 08 Nov 2013 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2013 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/IuiAC7IZ Website: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: Katherine Skiba DURBIN, KIRK DIFFER ON LEGAL RESTRICTIONS FOR MARIJUANA WASHINGTON - Sens. Dick Durbin and Mark Kirk staked out opposing positions on marijuana Thursday during a coffee with constituents on Capitol Hill. Durbin, a Democrat, said he supported the use of medical marijuana for people with conditions such as glaucoma. Kirk, a Republican, said he preferred that marijuana "be restricted as much as possible." Illinois lawmakers this year approved a medical marijuana pilot program for patients with serious illnesses. "The medical marijuana laws in many states are really rapidly changing the public view toward marijuana," Durbin said. "So I think we are evolving toward a situation where there are less punitive responses to the use of marijuana." Still, Durbin said he could not support decriminalization of marijuana because he worried about it being a "gateway" drug. He said he had several friends whose children became addicted to serious drugs. But he said marijuana possession should not be treated in a criminal fashion, expressing concern over prisons being filled with nonviolent offenders who had either possessed drugs or sold small quantities of them. He said young people who made "stupid decisions early in life" and tried marijuana shouldn't have that "dog" them for the rest of their lives. Although Kirk said he favored full restrictions on marijuana, he did not comment directly on medical marijuana or Illinois' new law, which takes effect next year. He said he was worried about young people's academic achievement. "In my own life, there were kids that in the '70s we would call the 'burnouts' who were heavily smoking," Kirk said. "Those kids, as they got to their 50s, were generally much lower performing in their careers and their lives. I don't want kids to have the opportunity to see what a life like that is like." The two spoke in answer to a question from Steve O'Mara, 67, a retired credit union official from Arlington Heights. He attended the coffee with his wife, Judy, and two grandchildren, both age 10. On another subject, Durbin sized up Congress' popularity by saying, "The approval rating is somewhere below Donald Trump and head lice." That echoes the findings of a poll this year by Public Policy Polling. It found that in one-on-one matchups, Congress was less popular than Trump, head lice and root canals, but more popular than telemarketers, Lindsay Lohan and the ebola virus. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom