Washington's Marijuana Decrim Bill Why it's Good and whats the hold up?

subcool

Well-Known Member
The Washington state legislature is looking at a bill which would decriminalize adult marijuana possession in the Evergreen State.

There are many, many reasons that reducing the penalties for marijuana is a good thing. But the biggest and best is:

You don't get put in a cage for pot.

Anyone who underestimates the value of not being in a cage hasn't spent much time in one.

Under current law, possessing as little as one joint is punishable by up to 90 days in jail. In Washington last year, 11,553 people were arrested on marijuana possession charges.

As reported by Dominic Holden in The Stranger, sponsors and advocates behind the bill intend to emphasize the bill’s savings. Representative Brendan Williams (D-22, Olympia), one of the bill's co-sponsors, said he plans to “frame it in terms of the tradeoff in the budget discussion … and set a square alternative."

Williams says conservative legislators could be attracted to the cost-saving argument for decriminalization more than ever. “Do you choose to provide health care for x number of children or fund criminalizing marijuana possession?” he asked. For example, Williams cites a cost analysis of pot busts taken from Washington State Institute for Public Policy data that shows, based on the number of arrests in 2007, Washington would save $7.5 million by passing the law.

No Republicans have co-sponsored either the House or the Senate versions of the marijuana decrim bill.


Chart: The Stranger

Alison Holcomb, director of the ACLU of Washington’s Drug Policy Project, said public opinion is on the bill’s side. A recent poll shows 81 percent of Washington voters believe pot laws aren’t working. “I think that the bill is an improvement Washington voters are ready to see,” she says. Massachusetts voters passed a nearly identical measure in November by a 30-point margin—and the lack of pot-induced hysteria in Massachusetts may provide evidence that the hackneyed reefer-madness claims about marijuana reforms are unfounded.

"Thirteen other states have already [decriminalized marijuana]"—including Massachusetts, where a measure similar to the one in the Washington State legislature passed a public vote in November by a 30-point margin—"and we haven't seen any of those other states struggle with [the] problem" of federal prosecution, Holcomb said.

California has made possession of marijuana a civil infraction, and, like Washington, it also sits on an international border and has a coastline patrolled by federal agents.

The Facts

SB 5615 would change pot possession of 40 grams or less from a misdemeanor to a $100 civil infraction. The Senate Judiciary Committee is holding a hearing on SB 5615 Tuesday, February 10 at 10 a.m. in Hearing Room 1 of the J.A. Cherberg Building on the Capitol campus in Olympia, WA.

http://apps.leg.wa.gov/billinfo/summ...5615&year=2009

This is a companion bill to HB 1177:

http://apps.leg.wa.gov/billinfo/summ...1177&year=2009

The House version of the bill, HB 1177, is being held up in the Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Committee by the committee chairman, this asshat, Rep. Chris Hurst:

http://www.leg.wa.gov/HOUSE/hurst

Reality Catcher suggests you call his office and let him know what you think about that. (For best results, I further suggest you don't call Rep. Hurst or his assistants "asshats." Do as I say, not as I do.)

Telephone (360) 786-7866

Or if you're one of his constituents, you can send him a message online:

Email Rep. Chris Hurst

In addition, if you are a resident of Washington, you can use this online form provided by the Washington ACLU to contact your state legislators:

https://secure.aclu.org/site/Advocac...mepage&id=1219
 

Boneman

Well-Known Member
Great post subcool :hump:

My state has decriminalized but is not yet on board with MMJ. I think it will come sooner than later and hope all other states start to realize the money and resourses they are wasting by busting and housing simple marijuana violations.

:joint: ~Boneman
 

NYC Diesel

New Member
hopefully during obama's presidency all this hubbub will have come to an end. Atleast decriminalization for people over 18. How much longer can the government be ignorant for?
 

Kodank Moment

Well-Known Member
I sincerely hope obama does something sooner rather then later. Hey subcool would calling them "dickfaces" be more of the politicaly correct thing to do? Seems "asshats" wasn't as effective as we all hoped... :)
 

EckoSky

Active Member
Does anyone know what the time line for something like this is? I'm not that familiar with politics.
 

EckoSky

Active Member
WA lawmakers consider expanding marijuana law

By BRIAN SLODYSKO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

OLYMPIA, Wash. -- Lawmakers are considering expanding the state's medical marijuana law to allow registered nurses, physician assistants and naturopathic doctors to recommend pot to their patients.

Currently, only medical doctors can recommend medical marijuana.

Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles, the bill's sponsor, argues that patients in rural areas have to drive too far in order to find a doctor to recommend the drug to them.

"I'm trying to visualize someone suffering from the ravages of cancer having to travel a few hundred miles to talk to a physician," Kohl-Welles, D-Seattle, said Thursday at a hearing before the Senate Health and Long-Term Care Committee. "It just doesn't make sense."

Under state law, marijuana cannot be prescribed, but doctors may recommend it to their patients by signing a form that patients can carry with them as protection against arrest for pot possession.

Supporters of the bill say many who could be eligible to use marijuana don't have regular access to a doctor.

Joanna McKee, a co-founder of the Green Cross, a medical marijuana advocacy group, noted that nurses and physician assistants already provide significant levels of care to people.

"So if they are the primary person giving care, why not let them recommend it to people too?" she asked.

Law enforcement groups oppose the bill, arguing it would lead to more abuse of the medical marijuana law.

"Not everybody out there is using it as medical marijuana," said Bill Hanson, a lobbyist for the Fraternal Order of Police.

The bill's current wording does not mention naturopaths but Kohl-Welles said she wants to amend it to include them.

Dr. Robert May, executive director of the Washington Association of Naturopathic Physicians, told the committee that naturopathic doctors specialize in organic and natural medicines and therefore should be allowed to recommend marijuana.

Washington's medical marijuana law was approved by nearly 60 percent of voters in 1998, close behind California in the first wave of similar measures around the country.

Federal law does not recognize a legal medical use for marijuana. But under Washington's law, doctors are allowed to recommend marijuana for people suffering from "intractable pain" and some serious diseases, including cancer, AIDS and multiple sclerosis.

Marijuana patients still can be arrested and prosecuted, but may avoid conviction in state courts by proving a legitimate medical need.

Doug Hiatt, a Seattle lawyer who represents medical marijuana users across the state, said he hopes expanding who can recommend pot will demonstrate to authorities the legitimacy of the drug's medicinal purposes.

Elsewhere in the Legislature:

- The Senate Judiciary Committee, with the support of ranking minority member Bob McCaslin, R-Spokane Valley, approved a measure Wednesday to decriminalize the possession of 1.4 ounces or less of pot. There is a similar bill in the House.

Sen. Pam Roach, R-Auburn, said she was alarmed by the committee vote. If approved by the Legislature, Roach said the bill would lead to increased crime and more automobile deaths.

"This is a bill that comes right out of downtown Seattle," she declared. "Any time we have downtown Seattle dictating social mores across the state it's a problem."

McCaslin said the measure could save the state as much as $3 million a year in jail fees and court costs.

"The state is in the liquor business - which is one of the most harmful drugs on the market - the federal government is in the tobacco business, and we're putting people in jail for marijuana?" McCaslin said.

---

The medical marijuana bill is Senate Bill 5798. The pot possession bills are House Bill 1177 and Senate Bill 5615.
Just heard about this.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/6420ap_wa_xgr_medical_marijuana.html
 
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