Pubdate: Sat, 10 Jan 2015 Source: Press-Enterprise (Riverside, CA) Copyright: 2015 The Press-Enterprise Company Contact: http://www.pe.com/localnews/opinion/letters_form.html Website: http://www.pe.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/830 Author: Ken Cable UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES OF POT LEGALIZATION The Press-Enterprise continues its relentless push to open up Riverside County to the blessings of the kind of fallout from the cannabis clouds now forming over of Washington and Colorado. In "Poised to legalize pot?" [Editorial, Jan. 7], it declares positively that "the legalization of marijuana is a matter of when not if" in the Inland Empire. The P-E's curious position is that elected representatives' reluctance in San Bernardino and Riverside to approve medical marijuana dispensaries has been a failure to respond to the demands of the people who sent them to the councils to make such decisions. The P-E is pushing for an initiative so that the people can decide the issue. In a state and county where only 15 percent or so of voters bother to vote on such special issues, who does the P-E think will flock to the polls to vote for marijuana? Of course, an initiative is a nice way for community leaders to avoid direct responsibility just in case the sky falls on the Inland Empire as it apparently has on Denver. Warnings that the lucrative tax expectations may fall short were ignored in Colorado, as were the predictions that "sick" people seeking marijuana remedies, and the homeless, would flock to Denver and the cannabis black market would shrink into the shadows and fade away. Observe: "Dispensaries a thorn to legal pot states" [Nation, Jan. 3] reports that tax revenues in Colorado have fallen far short of rosy expectations, that black market sales are successfully competing with "legal" outlets and that the number of pot patients registered in Colorado went up, not down. Apparently, recreational pot users in Colorado have discovered that by searching their bodies for illnesses that would qualify them for medical marijuana they could save lots in taxes. Epidemics of newly discovered pot-qualifying illnesses can be expected to sweep states and communities that offer this benefit. Oh, and "Denver shelters say legalized pot proves a big draw for homeless" [Business, Jan. 4] reports a steady rise in homeless persons seeking shelter and medical marijuana in Denver. A potential bright spot when/if the P-E's campaign is successful might be the county and its communities will garner enough tax money to help pay the costs of these unintended consequences. Ken Cable Canyon Lake - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom