Pubdate: Thu, 01 Jan 2015
Source: Boulder Weekly (CO)
Copyright: 2015 Boulder Weekly
Contact:  http://www.boulderweekly.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/57
Author: Leland Rucker

AFTER A YEAR, IT APPEARS THAT LEGALIZATION MIGHT JUST WORK

It's hard to believe that it's been one full year since retail 
cannabis shops opened, and two full years that cannabis has been 
legal in Colorado. So much has happened, but the best news of all is 
that, all things considered, the experiment seems to be working.

There is no real way to tell after a year how legalization has 
affected the people who live in a state that dared to try something 
no state had ever attempted. But despite cannabis still being 
prohibited on a federal level (but legal in the city where the 
government resides), Colorado and Washington's new laws continue to 
show that legalization is a viable alternative to the so-called war on drugs.

The state was a madhouse 365 days ago, with national and 
international media parked in front of the few dispensaries that were 
open for legalization's first day. Accounts of long lines outside 
shops, high prices and product shortages dominated the news. The 
media atmosphere was intense, almost like everybody was staked out, 
waiting around for something bad to happen.

But nothing did. And today many Coloradans now stop by and pick up 
their cannabis on their way to King Soopers or the shopping center.

There have been hiccups. Probably the biggest concerned edibles. 
Early news stories concentrated on an apparent suicide and a domestic 
murder after edibles ingestion, and New York Times columnist Maureen 
Dowd, in a widely distributed column, reported feeling like she was 
going to die after eating too much of an edible.

Since edibles make up a healthy percentage of state retail sales 
(probably 30-40 percent), the majority of people obviously don't have 
a problem with edible dosages. Still, medical patients have used 
higher-dosage edibles for years, and moving those same products into 
a market of unprepared newbies produced some confusion.

The legislative solution isn't perfect, but now retail clients have 
access to lower-dosage edibles to better learn their limits. You 
can't overdose on cannabis, but you could have an unpleasant, 
Dowd-like experience, and hopefully, the attention to dosage will 
help alleviate much of that. And as far as I can see, there isn't 
much more the state can do to protect people from themselves.

Finally, just a word about a couple of things I hope we don't repeat 
in 2015. The first is Gov. John Hickenlooper's "scare teens campaign" 
that included life-sized lab rat cages in locations around the state. 
Just behind that is the great Halloween "cannabis candy" scare 
promoted by the Denver Police Department and anti-cannabis groups.

The guv's $2 million, highly publicized, high-intensity advertising 
boondoggle was so badly thought out and in such poor taste that the 
Boulder County School District, certainly no fan of cannabis use 
among children, came out publicly against it.

The Halloween candy scare was promoted by the Denver Police 
Department, which has opposed legalization without ever explaining 
why its own efforts to uphold prohibition have never worked, either.

Media coverage reached fever pitch in the days leading up to 
Halloween, with television announcers suggesting to gullible parents 
that evil pot smokers, who are paying high prices for edibles, would 
not hesitate to dose innocent children. If the implications weren't 
so cliched, they would be offensive, and, of course, there were no 
reported lacedcandy incidents in the state, or anywhere else, for that matter.

Both of these are typical of continued, failed policies promoted by 
those who have a stake in and want to continue the war against 
cannabis, much to the consternation of a majority of the country's 
voters, who continue to send the opposite message to state legislators.

Both outline a pervasive feeling among some officials that making 
cannabis legal for adults also makes more teenagers want to try it. 
While there is no actual evidence of that so far, they continue to 
insist that legalization is encouraging young people.

But as the "lab rat" campaign proved, trying to scare kids into not 
using cannabis just doesn't work. And as the last 40 years of federal 
policy has shown, it will never work.

Last year, during a stakeholder's meeting on edibles, Gina Carbone of 
SmartColorado said that legalization has made parenting harder.

That's the part that really baffles me. Does studying the issues and 
actually talking with your children honestly about the pros and cons 
of cannabis like you would about tobacco, alcohol or sex or anything 
else important really make parents' jobs more difficult? Why would 
parenting have been any easier when cannabis was illegal and kids 
were getting it on the black market?

The National Institute on Drug Abuse just released its annual 
Monitoring the Future survey of 50,000 high school students. NIDA 
generally funds only research that studies cannabis "abuse." But its 
own survey shows a slight decline in students reporting cannabis use 
in the years since states have begun legalizing.

"Now that the national conversation about marijuana is 'above 
ground,' parents and teachers are able to have honest conversations 
with teens based on sound science, health and safety," says Marsha 
Rosenbaum of the Drug Policy Alliance. "The declines in use revealed 
in [Monitoring the Future] may well indicate that teens are 
listening, and choosing to make wise decisions."

I couldn't put it any better. Happy new year, everybody.

You can hear Leland discuss his most recent column and Colorado 
cannabis issues each Thursday morning on KGNU. 
http://news.kgnu.org/category/features/weed-between-the-lines/
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom