Pubdate: Wed, 04 Mar 2015 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2015 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/mUgeOPdZ Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: Courtland Milloy MAYOR HARSHES A POT ADVOCATE'S MELLOW Adam Eidinger was flying high. As chairman of the DC Cannabis Campaign, he helped spearhead the push to legalize marijuana in the nation's capital. When the law went into effect Thursday, he retreated to his campaign headquarters and took a victory toke, then another and another. Now, just a few days later, Eidinger is feeling low. On Tuesday, the D.C. Council passed emergency legislation - offered by Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) - that Eidinger says will undermine some provisions of the original law and hamper further liberalization of marijuana use. Bowser's legislation doubles down on restricting marijuana use to the home - making clear that the prohibition on smoking outdoors doesn't mean that just any old indoors will do. You won't be allowed to smoke inside any business registered with the city - not in a nightclub, private club, hotel, bar or restaurant, to name a few. "This is nonsense," Eidinger said. "People who want to grow and smoke marijuana are tired of living like criminals." Malik Burnett, policy manager for the Drug Policy Alliance, was bummed out, too. "I can see the outcry against smoking in public spaces," said Burnett, who is a physician, "and making it a civil offense with a fine is not necessarily a terrible way to deter public use. But to impose criminal penalties undermines the reason why marijuana was legalized." The primary reason was to put an end to racial disparities in arrests for marijuana possession. In 2013, the ACLU of the Nation's Capital reported that blacks in the District were nearly eight times as likely as whites to get arrested even though the rates of marijuana use were roughly the same. Under the initiative approved by voters, residents and visitors ages 21 and older will be allowed to legally possess as much as two ounces of marijuana and to grow up to three marijuana plants at home. Eidinger believes that confining smoking to private residences will cause smokers to turn their homes into "speakeasies" and "after-hours joints." "In light of how the law was being enforced in D.C., the people most likely to get caught smoking outdoors and end up with criminal records are the ones likely not to own a home or those who live in apartments where the lease prohibits smoking," Burnett said. "You could end up with racial disparities in arrests being even greater." Until the details of her legislation became known, Bowser was being hailed by pot advocates as the warrior queen of Washington. When some in Congress became irate about the prospect of marijuana being legalized in their back yard, Bowser stood her ground. One of them threatened to have city officials jailed and to hold up parts of the city budget that Congress controls. At a news conference, Bowser seemed to lean into the microphones and all but dare them to do it. Her legislation, however, did not convey that same boldness. "She's just trying to temper any backlash for sticking up for marijuana," Eidinger said. "She's giving something to the people who were against it: the Republicans in Congress, the 30 percent of the people in the city who voted against it - the elitists, the establishment. She does something great then turns around and does something bad." Is Bowser having second thoughts? Mike Czin, the mayor's spokesman, says no. "The law passed by voters says ' home grown, home use,' and the mayor just wants to make sure it's done in a safe, responsible way," Czin said. Eidinger said that being homebound is not what he bargained for. "To say you can only use it in your home smacks of secondclass status," he said. "You would never say you can only drink at home. This would keep thousands of us in our homes, around our kids. I don't smoke when my daughter is at home." I relayed Eidinger's concerns to Czin. "It's legal to smoke cigarettes, but that doesn't mean you can smoke where your activities are a disruption to others," Czin said. "It comes down to basic decorum." Eidinger said, "But if I want to rent out a venue where people can gather to smoke, that would be against the law." He sounded exasperated, like he could use a joint. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom