On Tuesday, voters in Washington state, Oregon and Colorado will decide if marijuana should be legal for recreational use, allowing adults to possess small amounts of pot under a regimen of state regulation and taxation. Under federal law, any marijuana use is still illegal. Six other states — Arkansas, Massachusetts, Illinois, New York, Pennsylvania, and Ohio— will decide whether to allow marijuana use for so-called medicinal reasons, as 17 states and Washington, D.C. have done previously.
CADCA’s coalitions in these states have been working hard to educate the public about the harm of marijuana use, especially among youth, countering proponents who see the issue as “reefer reform.”
“The Eagle River Youth Coalition in Edwards, Colo. hosted a successful event last week that educated community members about marijuana and youth. The presenters (renowned physician, law enforcement officer, and jail inmates) shared and offered resources on the negative impacts of marijuana use on the adolescent brain, addictive nature of the drug and likelihood of it being a “gateway drug”, and on local youth usage and perception data,” said Michelle Hartel Stecher, the coalition’s Executive Director.
"Colorado is known for many great things — marijuana should not be one of them," Colorado’s Gov. John Hickenlooper said about Amendment 64. "Amendment 64 has the potential to increase the number of children using drugs and would detract from efforts to make Colorado the healthiest state in the nation. It sends the wrong message to kids that drugs are OK."
CADCA members, the San Luis Valley Prevention Coalition, in Alamosa County, like other coalitions, have been educating their community by disseminating factual information and statistics about the measure and working on policies to increase barriers to accessing marijuana as well as tobacco and alcohol.
In Washington state, coalition leader Linda Thompson, where, according to public polls, their well-funded Initiative 502 is favored to pass, said community mobilization around marijuana legalization has occurred in every county in their state in a variety of ways.
The coalitions that she is a part of, as Executive Director of the Greater Spokane Substance Abuse Council (GSSAC) and the Vice President and founding member of the state-wide Washington Association for Substance Abuse and Violence Prevention (WASAVP), have been countering the points of legalization proponents in a variety of venues, including with media editorial boards and with their partners in bordering Idaho and Oregon, where trafficking could occur.
”We have great leaders all over the state who have been doing great things like conducting interviews, participating in debates, sending letters, and giving presentations, but we are up against a well-financed and professional legalization team. Despite this, we keep going on and will continue to educate about the harm of marijuana,” she said.
Thompson said, although WASAP has taken a stance against Initiative 502, she knows some coalitions working on marijuana policy might not be able to devote a lot of time to advocacy or might not even think they can advocate or take a stance.
“We can speak up with education. If you cannot advocate against legalization, prevention is prevention is prevention…We want our kids to make the choice not to use,” she said.
Tom Parker, Lines for Life’s Strategic Development and communications Director, said Oregon’s marijuana legalization measure 80 has a faulty template and doesn’t seem likely to pass, but that hasn’t stopped the statewide non-profit organization committed to providing alcohol and drug prevention education and treatment referral from continuing their marijuana prevention work since medical marijuana was passed.
“We have pointed out the flaws in measure 80 and spoken out against it. As marijuana attitudes have continued to soften, so-called “medical marijuana” sends a fuzzy message to our youth that if it’s OK to use as medicine, it’s OK to use it recreationally, it might be a benign drug, when we know it’s not,” Parker said.
CADCA’s coalitions know that one of the best strategies in marijuana prevention has been sharing the facts, especially the science, how the drug affects the teen brain, and how prolonged use can reduce one’s IQ to the “lower third.”
Kevin Sabet, Ph.D., Director of the Institute on Drug Policy at the University of Florida, Assistant Professor in the College of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, joins both presidential candidates and the American Medical Association in opposing marijuana legalization. Read his opinion editorial here:http://www.usnews.com/debate-club/should-marijuana-use-be-legalized/there-are-smarter-ways-to-deal-with-marijuana-than-legalization.
CADCA’s National Coalition Institute will host the webinar “Marijuana: Science and Strategies for Community Coalitions” from 3-4:30 p.m. EST Nov. 15 featuring Dr. Sabet, Dr. Susan Weiss, Acting Director of the Office of Science Policy and Communications at the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA); Sue Thau, CADCA Public Policy Consultant; and Rhonda Ramsey Molina, Deputy Director of Dissemination and Coalition Relations for the CADCA Institute. Register here.