Pubdate: Sat, 09 Jan 2016 Source: Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Copyright: 2016 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: Lisa Olson Note: Lisa Olson is a veteran teacher and mother of five in Mesa. She is a medical marijuana card holder and an advocate for increasing education funding/support and seeking alternative solutions for chronic disease, such as the one she lives with, multiple sclerosis LEGAL MARIJUANA WOULD BE GOOD FOR KIDS In November, Arizona voters will likely have the opportunity to decide whether marijuana should be regulated like alcohol in the state. With this vote on the horizon, it is time to seriously consider the implications of regulating marijuana. As a parent of five children and educator in Arizona for 25 years, my natural inclination is to wonder what impact it might have on young people in our state. While opponents of the proposed initiative claim it will be disastrous, the evidence suggests otherwise. In December, the National Institute on Drug Abuse released the results of the annual Monitoring the Future survey, one of the nation's most prominent measures of teen substance use and abuse. It found that rates of marijuana use among middle- and high-school students have remained unchanged for the past five years despite several states rolling back prohibition laws and a dramatic shift in public attitude toward legalization. "All of those factors have led many to predict that there would be an increase in the pattern of use of marijuana among teenagers, and we are not seeing it," said NIDA director Dr. Nora Volkow in an interview with Time.com. The survey results also demonstrate how regulation can actually strengthen prevention efforts. It does so by conveying trends in the use of two other substances that are - or at least were - widely popular among teens: alcohol and cigarettes. Teen use of these products plummeted following the launch of the "We Card" program in the mid-1990s. This renewed commitment to restrict sales to minors, paired with heightened enforcement efforts by regulators, led to a considerable drop in the number of teens reporting it was "fairly easy or very easy" to obtain them. As a result, teen alcohol and cigarette use are at record low levels, according to NIDA, and fewer teens are using cigarettes than marijuana. Meanwhile, outside of the handful of states that have regulated the sale of marijuana, there is no enforcement mechanism to prevent marijuana sales to minors. Laws that prohibit sales across the board have failed to reduce use among teens, and for decades teens reported it is easier to purchase marijuana than it is to purchase alcohol. After all, underground marijuana dealers do not ask for ID and they do not have any particular incentive to sell only to adults. If we want to prevent our state's young people from accessing marijuana, our state needs to start controlling marijuana. That is why I support the initiative to regulate marijuana like alcohol in Arizona. Under the proposed law, authorities will know who is selling marijuana, where and when it is being sold, and, most importantly, to whom it is being sold. Sales will take place in licensed businesses that ask for ID and do not sell to minors for fear of losing their ability to sell to adults. As an added bonus, these sales will generate much-needed tax revenue for our state. Colorado is on pace to see close to $1 billion in sales of medical and adult-use marijuana in 2015. This will generate more than $100 million in tax revenue for the state and localities, including more than $30 million specifically dedicated to public-school construction. Similarly, the proposed initiative in Arizona will enact a 15 percent tax on retail marijuana sales and direct much of the revenue to public schools and full-day kindergarten programs. According to the Grand Canyon Institute, a centrist think-tank, it will initially raise about $64 million per year for the state, including $51 million for K-12 education. There are many good reasons to end marijuana prohibition and replace it with a regulated system. If you have considered those reasons and still say, "But what about the children?," I encourage you to take a closer look at the evidence. If you do, you'll find that it would be be good for them, too. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom