Pubdate: Tue, 13 Jan 2015 Source: Burlington Free Press (VT) Copyright: 2015 Burlington Free Press Contact: http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/632 Author: Kimberly Cheney Note: Kimberly Cheney of Montpelier is a former Vermont attorney general. VERMONT MUST LEGALIZE MARIJUANA Vermont must legalize, regulate, and control marijuana if we expect to improve public safety, inform our children of its dangers, keep money out of the pockets of criminals, and build a coherent policy coordinating police, public health, education and peer support to reduce youth drug use. Marijuana prohibition has failed to deter people from consuming marijuana and, as a result, it has fostered the growth of an underground market and made criminals rich. Existing prohibitionist policies simply haven't worked, and even decriminalizing marijuana possession for adults still stops short of undercutting street dealers and reducing associated violence. As we have in so many other ways, Vermont can once again be a leader, showing how a carefully crafted law can be a victory for justice and public safety. Vermonters should support marijuana regulation whether they consume marijuana or not, because prohibition has strained our entire criminal justice system. Prohibition diverts already limited police resources away from assisting with calls reporting break-ins, domestic violence, and other violent and property crimes. Vermont did decriminalize personal possession of small amounts in 2013, and while that keeps many of our friends and neighbors out of jail and court, it didn't appear to free up much extra time for officers to do their jobs. In 2014, Vermont law enforcement issued more than double the number marijuana citations than the marijuana arrests on file for 2012. Ticketing low-level, nonviolent marijuana users creates a questionable incentive for police to, once again, waste their time instead of keeping the peace. Children are most certainly not safer when marijuana is kept illegal. In order to accept this, we must also fully acknowledge that people of all ages across the world will continue to experiment with drugs regardless of the law. People even use and sell drugs in countries such as Singapore, where the punishment for some drug crimes is the death penalty. Marijuana prohibition empowers dangerous criminals to profit from a business that operates entirely under the radar, so they're not required to test the product in a lab for purity and potency. They're not required to check a customer's age before a sale. Marijuana dealers don't just sell marijuana, either; someone who sells marijuana could easily expose a child to other drugs that have far more serious health and social consequences, and dangerous situations that involve gang activity, weapons and violence. Marijuana prohibition - not marijuana itself - is the true gateway drug. It is prohibition that sends the wrong message to kids, that secret use, hiding from police and parents, and hanging out with suppliers is the way to live. Instead, public awareness of how marijuana may impact a developing adolescent brain, or how adult abuse impairs life goals, must be prioritized alongside responsible regulations. Parents should be educated in how to have conversations with their children about substance use and abuse. Explaining marijuana legalization to children - children who could very well know more about the drug than their parents - should be no different than having a conversation about alcohol and tobacco. The concerns that parents may have about their kids being harmed by legalized marijuana can be addressed more effectively by education, regulation and opaque, childproof packaging than by continuing ineffective and counterproductive prohibition. Legalizing marijuana hasn't created a safety crisis for children in Colorado or Washington, and it won't create one here either. As a former attorney general of Vermont and a representative of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, I am committed to bringing awareness to the failures of marijuana prohibition and working toward a safer Vermont. Police will continue to play an important role in marijuana policy, but our policy should be directed by a comprehensive plan. We can use our public safety resources more effectively and keep kids away from drugs by implementing a common-sense policy to regulate marijuana. We can't expect a different result by doing the same failed action over again. The only hope lies in a fundamentally different approach; without further delay, the Vermont Legislature should move forward with plans to regulate marijuana in 2016. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom