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Marijuana Legalization Bills Defeated in Maryland

Marijuana Legalization Proposals Die in Committee
Contact: Anisha Gianchandani
+1 (703) 828-8182
[Alexandria , VA, April 12, 2017] –  Yesterday, an alliance of concerned citizens, public health experts, and safety officials soundly defeated two marijuana legalization bills in Maryland. The bills, which would have permitted commercial pot shops in communities throughout the state, died without a vote in the Maryland Senate last night. SAM Executive Vice President Jeff Zinsmeister and Maryland-based neuroscientist and SAM Science Advisor Dr. Christine Miller testified in Annapolis last month, urging the legislature to reject marijuana legalization and commercialization. AAA Mid-Atlantic also testified against the bills, citing traffic safety concerns due to drugged driving increases in states that have legalized marijuana.
\”This is a major victory in the effort to put public health and common sense before special interests,\” said SAM Executive Vice President Jeff Zinsmeister. \”The costs of legalization, including more stoned drivers on the roads causing fatalities, more people being driven into treatment for addiction, and higher regulatory costs far outweighed any benefit Maryland would see. The Big Marijuana lobbyists came into Maryland touting the notion that marijuana legalization would fix our criminal justice system and rake in millions – but Maryland smartly concluded that legalization actually exacerbates these issues. All they had to do was look to Colorado, where more minority youth are being arrested for marijuana and the state deficit is growing. \”
\”We believe that science and research, not profit, should drive what marijuana laws look like in our state,\” said Dr. Christine Miller, a Maryland neuroscientist and member of SAM\’s Science Advisory Board.  \”The pro-marijuana lobby was looking to profit by selling a harmful, addictive substance that would harm our communities and endanger public safety. I\’m proud that evidence-based policy putting health first prevailed in Maryland yesterday.\”
Evidence demonstrates that marijuana – which has skyrocketed in average potency over the past decades – is  addictive and harmful to the human brain, especially when used by adolescents. Moreover, in states that have already legalized the drug, there has been an increase in  drugged driving crashes and  youth marijuana use. S tates that have legalized marijuana have also failed to shore up state budget shortfalls with marijuana taxes, continue to see a thriving black market, and are experiencing a continued rise in alcohol sales.

 

Rocky Mountain HIDTA reports and publications can be found at www.rmhidta.organd by clicking on “Reports.”

The LegalizationMarijuana in Colorado_The ImpactVolume 4Sept2016DUID

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Senate Marijuana Legalization Proposal Stalled
Contact: Anisha Gianchandani  – [email protected]
+1 (703) 828-8182
[Alexandria , VA, April 6, 2017] –  Yesterday, a broad coalition of public health experts, elected officials, educators, and concerned citizens made significant headway in the effort to stop marijuana legalization in Connecticut. Senate Bill 11 died without a vote in the House Judiciary Committee last night. The bill  would have legalized the commercialization of marijuana in Connecticut and permitted retail sales in marijuana stores throughout the state. SAM\’s Connecticut affiliate was the primary coalition organizer and SB11 opponent.
\”This is a major setback for marijuana legalization,\” said SAM President and CEO Kevin A. Sabet. \”This year, states are refusing to import the host of public health and safety consequences we\’ve seen in places like Colorado: more kids getting high, more stoned drivers on the roads, and more people being driven into treatment for addiction. The Big Marijuana special interests are trying to sell Connecticut the lie that marijuana legalization can fix the state\’s budget deficit – thankfully Connecticut is realizing that like the lottery, these funds are less than expected. All they have to do is look to Colorado, where the state deficit is growing, not shrinking. \”
\”The first rule any doctor or public health official bears in mind is to do no harm,\” said Dr. Yifrah Kaminer, Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics at University of Connecticut School of Medicine. \”Legalizing marijuana would seriously harm public health and safety in our state. States like Colorado show us that more youth use marijuana and develop substance use disorders post-legalization. This experiment is rightly being rejected. I\’m proud Connecticut took a crucial step toward protecting the physical and mental health of our children today.\”
\”Connecticut residents do not want pot shops in our state – or the accompanying Big Marijuana special interest lobby,\” said Connecticut SAM member John Daviau. \”In states that have legalized marijuana, we\’ve seen the commercialization of a drug we know to be harmful. Marijuana legalization is ultimately about making a very small group of investors rich, but these special interest groups now need to start looking elsewhere.\”
Evidence demonstrates that marijuana – which has skyrocketed in average potency over the past decades – is  addictive and harmful to the human brain, especially when used by adolescents. In states that have already legalized the drug, there has been an increase in  drugged driving crashes,  youth marijuana use, and rising debt.  These states have seen a  black market that continues to thrive, sustained marijuana arrest rates, and a consistent  rise in alcohol sales.

 

Politicizing and Misunderstanding the Opioid Crisis

By Seth Leibsohn| April 5th, 2017|

The nation’s opioid crisis is real and it is serious. As Christopher Caldwell recently pointed out, “those who call the word ‘carnage’ an irresponsible exaggeration are wrong.” And so, too, are those playing politics with the crisis. Even beyond the politicization–or, perhaps, because of it–there is still a great deal of misunderstanding as to what is driving this crisis.

As for the first problem, the politics: Senator Claire McCaskill (D., MO) has announced that she is initiating an investigation of several opioid manufacturers, and is requesting “reams of information” from them. But note the one manufacturer she did not target and from which she did not request information–Mallinckrodt. Mallinckrodt, after all, is headquartered in Missouri, her own state. Odd, that. And it’s not as if Mallinckrodt is a bit player in the manufacture and sales of opioid drugs. Indeed, “it is one of the nation’s largest” producers, responsible for nearly 20 percent of the market share of opioid prescriptions. The companies McCaskill has targeted are responsible for a total market share of 5.25 percent combined. Odd, that. If she were serious about investigating pharmaceutical companies, she most certainly would be investigating the one based in her own home state which also happens to be the one responsible for most opioid sales in America.

But all of this is not even the beginning of the beginning in addressing America’s opioid crisis. For when political leaders like Senator McCaskill are not playing politics with the issue, they are too often misunderstanding it. Some of that is not their fault.

Part of the problem in addressing the opioid crisis is that the terminology can be confusing or misleading. People hear “opioid” or “prescription opioid” or “fentanyl” and begin to lump the problems all together as a crisis driven by legitimately prescribed drugs. No doubt, that is a part of the problem, but it is nowhere near the biggest part of it. Take a look at the best statistics available (taken from the Office of National Drug Control Policy and the CDC):

  • In 2015, there were 33,091 opioid overdose deaths.
  • Heroin deaths constituted 12,990 of those deaths.
  • Synthetic opioids (mostly illegal fentanyl) constitute another 9,580 deaths.

Because opioid deaths usually involve the use of more than one drug, percentages and raw numbers will not neatly add up to 100% or the 33,091 deaths. As the White House Website puts it: “A portion of the overdose deaths involved both illicit opioids and prescription opioids.” But what we can see from the above is that over 68 percent of the problem is from the use of illegal drugs.  Or, as the CDC put it in December of 2016: “[T]he increase in opioid overdose death rates is driven in large part by illicit opioids, like heroin and illicitly manufactured fentanyl, a synthetic opioid.”

As for the prescribed opioids, the majority of overdose deaths from those come from the diversion and illegal distribution of them. As the CDC notes: “Most people who abuse prescription opioids get them for free from a friend or relative.” The people “at highest risk of overdose” “get opioids using their own prescriptions (27 percent), from friends or relatives for free (26 percent), buying from friends or relatives (23 percent), or buying from a drug dealer (15 percent).” Thus, for the population that overdoses from opioid prescriptions, 64 percent abuse them from a diverted or illegal source. In other words, the abuse of opioid prescriptions that leads to overdose deaths involving a patient acquiring a legal prescription and misusing that prescription on himself is less than 30 percent of the prescription problem and constitutes about 15 percent of the overall opioid overdose problem.

For more https://amgreatness.com/2017/04/05/politicizing-misunderstanding-opioid-crisis/

 

Citizens Commission on Human Rights International is opposing the world-first study that could lead to millions of Australian and American teens being doped with prescribed marijuana.By CCHR International The Mental Health Industry Watchdog March 15, 2017

Australian psychiatrist Patrick McGorry, renowned for his debunked and dangerous theory that pre-drugging adolescents with antipsychotics can prevent psychosis, now plans to prescribe medical cannabis to treat “anxious” 12 year olds. His Australian study will give the drug to 12 to 25 year olds to treat anxiety and other “mental health issues.” Mental health watchdog, Citizens Commission on Human Rights International, is opposing the world-first study being given final approval by the Australian federal ethics committee later this month.[1] Prof. McGorry’s study could lead to millions of Australian and also American teens being doped up with prescribed marijuana, although it is argued that it is without psychoactive properties.[2] McGorry has strong ties to leading American psychiatrists and the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)

For More https://www.cchrint.org/2017/03/15/patrick-mcgorry-plans-to-dope-12yearolds-with-cannabis/

 

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Dear Smart Colorado Supporter:

On Monday, April 3rd at 3 p.m., the Denver City Council Marijuana Issues Committee will again consider extending marijuana dispensary hours from 7 p.m. until midnight. Denver, the epicenter of marijuana commercialization, should focus on reducing youth access rather than increasing exposure.

But we need your help! Please contact city council members listed below and ask that they DELAY the ordinance.  Currently, rules around the implementation of Initiated Ordinance 300 allowing for social consumption of marijuana are being determined.  These are 2 major changes in Denver marijuana policy.
Smart recommends that Denver evaluate the impacts of social consumption on youth for a period of 12-18 months before considering to further extend dispensary hours.

According to the latest state-sponsored Healthy Kids Colorado Survey:

  • Nearly half of Denver students reported that they had used marijuana,  compared to 38% statewide.
  • More than a quarter of Denver students said they had used marijuana in the past month, compared to 21% statewide.
  • 29.2% of Denver male high school students reported using marijuana in the past month, compared to 24.4% used alcohol.
  • 61% of Denver students reported it was sort of or very easy to get marijuana compared to 55.7% statewide.

https://www.facebook.com/smartcolorado/

 

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SAM Statement on the Appointment of Richard Baum as ONDCP Acting Director

[email protected] +1 (703) 828-8182
[Alexandria, VA, March 29, 2017] — Today, SAM President Kevin Sabet, a three-time drug policy staffer at the White House, commented on the selection of Richard Baum as Acting Director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP):
\”Rich Baum is exceptionally qualified to steer such a critical office at a time when drugs from marijuana to heroin are threatening public health in the United States. He has been a critical voice advancing progress among several important areas – like criminal justice innovation and international partnerships – and he remains a trusted voice both here and abroad in advancing a balanced, evidence-based drug policy.
\”We\’re hopeful that with the imminent announcement of a new opioid task force that ONDCP will remain the central national voice for drug policy. The office is vital to the mission of so many groups working every day to reduce drug use, stem addiction, promote recovery, and protect public safety.
\”At SAM, we are particularly concerned about marijuana policy developments being driven by profits and greed rather than public health. We do not want to see a new \’War on Drugs\’ centered on arrests for marijuana possession, but the Big Marijuana special interest lobby must be held accountable for endangering the health and safety of American communities. ONDCP is doing meaningful work to combat the opioid overdose epidemic, prevent drug use among youth, and dismantle drug trafficking organizations.\”
A February 17 New York Times story reported that ONDCP was on the White House\’s list of programs that could be cut to rein in domestic spending. On February 23, a sign-on letter from more than 70 medical and drug policy organizations, including SAM, was sent to White House Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney. The letter urged the Trump Administration to save ONDCP.
Evidence demonstrates that marijuana – which has skyrocketed in average potency over the past decades – is  addictive and harmful to the human brain, especially when used by adolescents. In states that have already legalized the drug, there has been an increase in  drugged driving crashes and  youth marijuana use. These states have also seen a  black market that continues to thrive, sustained marijuana arrest rates, and a consistent  rise in alcohol sales.

 

National wastewater drug monitoring program: report 1, 2017

Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission 26 March 2017 Download file

The National Wastewater Drug Monitoring Program will provide leading-edge, coordinated national research and intelligence on illicit drugs and licit drugs that can be abused, with a specific focus on methylamphetamine and 12 other substances.

For more http://apo.org.au/node/74833

 

Raids raise questions

Trudeau referred again to that rough timetable a few weeks ago when he said the legislation would be introduced before the summer. But at the same time he also warned that it wasn\’t yet open season for the legal sale of marijuana.

\”Until we have a framework to control and regulate marijuana, the current laws apply,\” Trudeau said in Esquimalt, B.C. on March 1.

That warning became more concrete a week later, when police in Toronto, Vancouver and other cities carried out raids on marijuana dispensaries and charged several people with possession and trafficking, including noted pot advocates Marc and Jodie Emery.

For more Maple Leaf to WEED

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