Pubdate: Fri, 10 Apr 2009 Source: Connecticut Post (Bridgeport, CT) Copyright: 2009sMediaNews Group, Inc Contact: http://www.connpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/574 Author: David B. Cappiello Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09/n401/a02.html TIME HAS COME TO UPDATE DRUG LAWS While the cost of the Legislature is alarming in a fiscal depression such as we are now experiencing, some other expenses that aren't being cut are downright disturbing to the majority of Connecticut residents. Gov. M. Jodi Rell is misguided in her attempts to trim the budget. While she was quoted in recent news articles as saying "Everyone has to think about giving back," she fails to take back marijuana prohibition and fails to view the Department of Correction budget as the real financial threat it is to our state. According to newspapers all over Connecticut, Rell is reportedly busy telling state employees to fix their own chairs and share pencils, and even cut money for a sick veterans registry program earlier this year! However, the war on drugs keeps receiving funding, so it may break up more families and turn "nonviolent criminals" into a larger problem. Indeed, while our neighbor to the north, Massachusetts, has recently decriminalized an ounce or less of marijuana, relaxed laws on marijuana are not new to the region. Maine and New York have been partially decriminalized for ages, and Vermont and Rhode Island have recently passed modern laws creating workable state-level medical marijuana programs. Our state spends tens of thousands of dollars per inmate, per year, many of them in prison for simple possession of marijuana. Our police waste precious funds investigating medical patients. Why does our state continue the obsession with outlawing marijuana? Certainly decriminalization and a workable medical program for patients will go a long way to keep the end user, medical or otherwise, out of the court and correctional systems, saving the state money. Some have used the argument of the "message it sends the children." But really, what message does it send a child or young adult who loses financial aid for college simply for owning a "joint" or two? What message is sent to a child when a cancer-stricken relative is branded a criminal and arrested for vaporizing, eating or smoking a last-resort herbal remedy? The real writing on the wall is the fact that drug prohibition hasn't worked in the 100 years we've been experimenting with it in our nation. After arresting more than 20 million people nationwide on simple marijuana charges since the 1970s, one would think politicians would see the error of their old ways. The majority of the public has long since been in favor of decriminalization and/or full-scale legalization, and medical marijuana has a super-majority of support in all reliable public opinion polls. Certainly, a regulated system of sales and production of marijuana, for consumption by adults age 18 and over, would bring in far more tax and tourism dollars to our depression-strapped state. It is high time this state had a serious talk about the drawbacks of marijuana prohibition, and how legalization can both save and create money by reducing corrections costs, while at the same time making our tourism industry more robust, bringing in business and tax dollars. David B. Cappiello President Connecticut chapter National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin