Pubdate: Mon, 09 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 IN SOME RESPECTS, DISTRICT POT USERS ARE STILL WAITING IN VAIN FOR JUSTICE During a visit with reggae singer Bob Marley in 1978, I asked him about the effects that smoking marijuana had on him. Relaxing in the sunroom of his home in Kingston, Jamaica, he said marijuana clarified his inner vision and inspired songs about peace and justice. Out of the "holy smoke," as Marley called it, came a plume of music that wafted far beyond the Jamaican shores, such as "Get Up, Stand Up" and another, written by fellow reggae singer Peter Tosh, called "Legalize It." Now, decades later, the District appears to be singing along. In November, residents motivated in large part by racial disparities in arrests for marijuana possession voted to legalize pot. The law took effect Feb. 26. "This is a watershed moment," Seema Sadanandan, policy director for the American Civil Liberties Union of the Nation's Capital, told me recently. "This is the first marijuana reform in the country driven by racial justice." No doubt the prophetic Marley, who died in 1981, would have been impressed by the victory. But perhaps not so much by what has happened since. Smoking pot legally does not appear to have inspired a sharper vision of justice, but rather pipe dreams of marijuana clubs, community pot gardens and a Seattle-style "Smoke-In" on the Mall. "The idea of how many plants you could grow or where you could hold weed parties was never the focus of the issue," said the Rev. Graylan Hagler, pastor of Plymouth Congregational United Church of Christ in Northeast Washington and a member of a coalition of ministers who supported legalization. "What we were looking at was the ramifications of legalized discrimination in which black people were being disproportionately arrested for marijuana possession." The focus on justice has not been lost altogether. In fact, the D.C. Council has endorsed legislation that Hagler and other supporters of legalization deem important: banning preemployment drug testing and allowing records of nonviolent marijuana convictions to be sealed. But these proposals are narrow, marijuana-focused tweaks with pitfalls that could end up hurting the very people they are meant to help. For instance, employers may be prohibited from testing job applicants until after a job offer is made. But they can test employees, and may choose to do so more rigorously. Anyone who can't stay clean long enough to apply for a job is not likely to stay clean long enough to keep one. What's needed is more drug treatment, not more drug enabling. As for sealing a criminal record, that's not the same as having it expunged. Fewer people may be able to see under the seal, but what's there can be seen. Telling a prospective employer that you don't have a record could get you caught in a lie. The push to end racially biased marijuana arrests had resulted in a more expansive view of justice. "We held hundreds of community meetings, went into schools and churches and talked to people on the street to build support for legalization," Sadanandan said. "They were concerned about police jump-out squads and 'stop and frisk' policies. What people were saying is that we need to have a conversation about the core values of the city, and whether our resources are being used in the best way to make it safer." The extraordinary coalition of activists in the legalization effort embodied those values. Ministers spoke to their congregations about the injustice in marijuana arrests. Black support for the measure jumped from 37 percent four years ago to more than 60 percent in the days leading up to the election. Pot smokers, arguing that marijuana was harmless and that they were tired of living like criminals, had found a powerful ally. Add to them libertarians opposed to government overreach and newly arrived millennials who had not only found a politically progressive cause, but also one that could be fun. Now the coalition appears to have drifted apart, like so much smoke. In the afterglow of victory, D.C. Cannabis Campaign chair Adam Eidinger declared, "The sun and the rain are still free, and now our seeds are, too." Those could have been lyrics from a Marley song - except that his would have been referring to the seeds of justice. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom