Pubdate: Mon, 22 Jun 2015 Source: Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Copyright: 2015 The Arizona Republic Contact: http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/opinions/sendaletter.html Website: http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/24 Author: Jayne Clark, USA TODAY LET OTHER STATES FIX BUGS IN POT LAW Ardent supporters of the legalization of marijuana just learned an important life lesson: The law moves slowly. The Colorado Supreme Court - the highest legal authority in the state with the country's most liberal pot laws - recently ruled 6-0 that employers can fire workers who use medical cannabis, even outside of working hours. "Lawful activities" are truly lawful only when they comport with both state and federal law, the court said. Colorado has legalized the possession and use of marijuana. Federal law is another matter. The court didn't address recreational use of marijuana, also legal in Colorado but illegal under federal law. But its decision leaves no doubt what it would say about that. Advocates should see this as a teachable moment. Two groups have launched petition drives to legalize recreational use of marijuana in Arizona. The Colorado decision should be clear evidence that Arizona should go slow and let other laboratories of democracy work through the legal pitfalls that come with such a dramatic shift in public policy. The disappointment among legalization advocates is palpable, of course. They had hoped the state's Medical Marijuana Amendment liberalizing the drug's use would comport with another state law, the Lawful Off-Duty Activities Statute, that protects workers from being fired for using specified drugs. The justices concluded it does not, for the same reason legal experts in Arizona and many other states wrangled with the issue: An activity cannot be truly "legal" if it remains illegal under federal law. And federal law does not appear likely to change anytime soon. Affirming lower-court rulings on the rights of businesses to keep their "zero tolerance" policies proved to be an easy call. Federal law views marijuana as a drug that (in the justices' words) has "no medical accepted use, a high risk of abuse and a lack of accepted safety for use under medical supervision." It is difficult to envision how the court would not rule that businesses should retain the right to forbid use of a drug with a legal designation such as that. Reform activists are not the most patient folk. But it helps to remember just how emphatically the concept of "zero tolerance" for drug abuse has been drilled, over the decades, into the corporate consciousness. Employers and the law will not quickly adapt to a new and growing tolerance for marijuana. If it is any consolation for activists, the number of companies maintaining a strict zero-tolerance policy in Colorado seems to be dwindling - likely the result of an increasingly competitive job market and the slow acceptance of a marijuana-tolerant culture. Reforming federal laws controlling these issues will be another matter. But until all those bugs get worked out, the experiences of Colorado and other pot-friendly states should tell Arizona to go slow on its own reforms. We should be in no hurry to take on the challenges they are discovering. Let others work the bugs out. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom