Pubdate: Thu, 31 Mar 2016 Source: Rutland Herald (VT) Copyright: 2016 Rutland Herald Contact: http://www.rutlandherald.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/892 Author: Julia Purdy Note: Julia Purdy is a resident of Rutland Town. CHECKING THE FACTS ON POT In the Great Marijuana Fight, facts are portrayed as fiction and vice versa. Even the power of logic is challenged. The letter writer ("Fiction and facts on marijuana," March 25) asserts that as "people 20-29 years" opt for marijuana over alcohol, this will result in fewer traffic accidents, "since alcohol is the main factor in these crashes. Furthermore, traffic accidents have fallen 9 percent in the states that have legalized marijuana." He cites the Department of Economics at University of Colorado. It may be true that "traffic accidents" have declined, but a general decrease in traffic fatalities or crashes in legal states cannot be attributed to legalization of marijuana. For decades anti-drinking campaigns from the federal level on down have warned against drinking while driving. Crashes in general may be down, but the percentage of fatal crashes due to marijuana use appears to be higher than ever. In Vermont alone, the Agency of Transportation reported 42 fatal highway crashes resulting in 44 fatalities between January 1, 2014 and the end of November 2014. Autopsies of the drivers revealed that only four of those fatal crashes involved alcohol. Ten of the fatalities were caused by stoned driving. Of those 10, two drivers had been using cannabis in conjunction with alcohol. Cannabis was also found in the systems of the other eight deceased drivers. Of those eight, three showed cannabis along with other drugs. (Source: Vermont Agency of Transportation.) The Rocky Mountain High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area, which has been tracking legalization in Colorado since 2011, has released its January 2016 report, an update of its three-volume publication, "The Legalization of Marijuana in Colorado: The Impact." This is available to the public in very readable form at www.rmhidta.org. Volume 2 of this report (August 2014) supports the Vermont experience mentioned above. It found that while traffic fatalities overall in Colorado decreased 14.8 percent, from 2007 to 2012 (the year of legalization), during the same five years in Colorado, traffic fatalities involving operators testing positive for marijuana had more than doubled, from 7.04 percent to 16.53 percent. Volume 2 also shows that throughout 2014, 874 citations were issued for driving under the influence of drugs, with 674 involving marijuana in combination with alcohol or other drugs, and of that number, 354 for marijuana only, according to the Colorado State Patrol DUID (Driving Under the Influence of Drugs) program, initiated in that same year. These are not opinions or fiction. If folks are going to search beyond the splashy headlines for consistent facts, gathered scientifically over time, they can find them at www.rmhidta.org. As for users opting for marijuana over alcohol, here is what the RAND Report, commissioned by Gov. Peter Shumlin, had to say: "Alas, that story of increased marijuana use being a substitute for alcohol use is not the only possibility. ... For example, current marijuana users are five times as likely as nonusers to meet DSM-IV criteria for alcohol abuse or dependence . ...; that is, one in four current marijuana users is a problem drinker (calculated using 2012 National Survey on Drug Use and Health data using the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration online tool). ... Indeed, simultaneous use is common. ... Doubling of marijuana use would not lead to even a halving of all drinkers, because there are nearly 10 times more drinkers than people who use marijuana." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom