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by JILLIAN SWORDS
News Reporter
How the war on drugs will be handled under the new presidential administration remains hazy, especially with regard to marijuana as state laws slowly continue to adapt lower penalties for those using it to get high.
Most recently, a Massachusetts voter-approved law to decriminalize possession of up to an ounce of marijuana went into effect Jan. 2.
Violators will be issued a citation and must either pay a maximum $100 civil penalty or request a civil hearing before a clerk or judge.
In addition, marijuana law reform bills are pending in almost a dozen other states.
Boone Police Chief Bill Post outlined North Carolina’s laws surrounding the drug.
While
possession of up to an ounce and a half of marijuana is still a
misdemeanor in North Carolina, the state largely decriminalized charges
in the 1970s when the government reexamined the drug’s likelihood to
cause dependency and other risks. It was consequently put into a less
dangerous category.
Post said violators never serve jail time for possession of up to an ounce and a half.
“The
jails and prisons are already full,” Post said. “When I hear people
talk about how low-level drug dealers fill up American prisons,
[they’re wrong.] There are too many violent offenders and criminals
that we have to deal with.”
Other
states employing various levels of marijuana decriminalization
legislature include Alaska, California, Colorado, Maine, Minnesota,
Mississippi, Nevada, Nebraska, New York, Ohio and Oregon.
Matthew
B. Robinson, government and justice studies professor at Appalachian
State University said in these states where possession of small amounts
is still a criminal (not civil) charge, city law enforcement can rate
marijuana enforcement as a low priority. Denver, Colo. recently did
this and was able to save enormous amounts of resources by pursuing it,
Robinson said.
Boone,
however, is not on this list. University students convicted of
possession also face a number of recriminations from the Office of
Student Conduct, ranging from community service to expulsion.
Various
other reservations about the drug have kept countrywide
decriminalization from becoming reality, including worries that
marijuana is a gateway drug. This implies that once a person begins to
use cannabis he or she would branch out and begin experimenting with
other drugs.
The vast
majority of marijuana users never go on to use any other drugs besides
tobacco and alcohol—addictive drugs they were, a majority of the time,
using underage before marijuana ever came into the picture, Robinson
said.
Between alcohol and marijuana, the former has decidedly been proven as the more dangerous, Robinson added.
“If
people are using [marijuana] instead of alcohol, that’s a net gain,”
Robinson said. “Alcohol is much more likely to cause antisocial
behavior and violence. What drug on campus [contributes to] rape?
Alcohol. Multiple studies show that marijuana…reduces violent impulses.”
Although
complete legalization would involve a number of multi-faceted issues,
like the fact it would probably be irresponsibly marketed towards young
people as tobacco and alcohol have been, “if a person could go to the
store and buy a six-pack of beer and a pack of joints, you wouldn’t see
people getting murdered over it like we saw in Boone several years
ago,” Robinson said.
Post
agreed that further decriminalization of the drug is a complex topic,
where issues like drugged driving must be taken into consideration.
North
Carolina Driving While Impaired laws leave discretion of whether
someone is impaired by an illegal substance or not up to the testimony
of the police officer, Post said.
“For alcohol impairment, we can set a scientific level of impairment at .08,” he said.
For marijuana, the border is much more subjective.
Senior
graphic arts and imaging technology major Andrew T. Markovic has
attended several rallies for The National Organization for the Reform
of Marijuana Laws (NORML) and said uses of the drug have its place.
“I know
people that use marijuana for medicinal purposes,” he said. “It brings
them a lot of comfort, rather than using a lot of [oxycodone] and
getting hooked on prescription painkillers.”
Overall,
Markovic said, “I think drugs are bad but I don’t think it’s the place
of a benevolent social planner to [regulate marijuana usage].”
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