Pubdate: Tue, 25 Jun 2013 Source: Daily American (Somerset, PA) Copyright: 2013 The Daily American Contact: http://www.dailyamerican.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4055 Author: Daylin Leach LEGALIZE MARIJUANA Recently, the Daily American printed the editorial "Not Worth It," arguing against Senate Bill 528, which would legalize, tax and regulate marijuana in Pennsylvania. Respectfully, many of the claims offered in that opinion piece simply don't hold water. Here's why. First, as the NAACP noted in its support of my legislation and referenced in the recently released ACLU study, the war on drugs is racially-biased, inefficient and ineffective. As stated in the report, African Americans in Pennsylvania are more than 5 times more likely to be arrested for possession than Caucasians, despite equal usage rates. In Somerset County, African Americans are 9.4 times more likely to be arrested. In 2010, Pennsylvania spent more than $100 million enforcing marijuana possession laws even though marijuana arrests only accounted for 37 percent of drug arrests. That is a lot of taxpayer money being spent to arrest a small number of people using a drug that has been found less harmful than both alcohol and tobacco. You mentioned in your article that higher prices will keep illegal drug use rates down, but you neglected to note the issue of safety. Currently, where must people go to buy marijuana? They must use back alley channels and purchase it from dealers who may have altered the substance or could try to persuade buyers to upgrade to another drug that may be dangerous and addictive. If the sale of marijuana was regulated, users could obtain it in small, safe amounts deemed appropriate by the state. Much like visiting the state store to buy liquor, marijuana smokers could purchase what they needed without endangering themselves in the process. To be clear, it will still be illegal under my bill to drive while under the influence of marijuana, to disrupt the peace while publicly intoxicated and to sell marijuana to minors. This legislation will simply legalize and regulate a product against which our state is waging an unnecessary war, incarcerating people unfairly and wasting millions of dollars in the process. The time to end this modern day prohibition is now. State Sen. Daylin Leach, D-17 Montgomery and Delaware counties - --- MAP posted-by: Matt