By in Rhode Island’s Future
Four New England states – Rhode Island, Vermont, Massachusetts,
and Maine – are poised to enact measures to regulate marijuana like alcohol in
the next two years. The big question is, which state will do it first?
The editorial board at The Providence
Journal does not want it to be Lil Rhody.
According to them, adults who
responsibly use marijuana should continue to be labeled as lawbreakers because
marijuana inexorably leads to the “general rot” of society (“Put pot on hold,” Jan. 6).
Fortunately, not all of our newly elected state leaders share The Providence
Journal’s antiquated views. Governor Raimondo, for example, recently argued
that, “[legalizing marijuana] is absolutely something we should evaluate,
because if we think it’s inevitable, and if there’s a way to do it that is
properly regulated so people don’t get hurt, then it’s something we should look
at.”
Polls show that a majority of Rhode
Islanders — and Americans — agree with Governor Raimondo and think it is time
to end the failed policy of marijuana prohibition. Last year 29 members in the
house of representative and 13 members of the state senate signed onto the
Marijuana Regulation, Control, and Taxation Act.
The “wait and see” argument, however,
will be far less effective in 2015. We now have more than a year’s worth of
data on Colorado’s experiment with allowing adults to purchase marijuana from
tightly regulated, licensed stores.
We no longer need to speculate: it is clear
that the sky does not fall when you treat marijuana like alcohol. Neutral
observers like the New York Times and the Brookings Institute have deemed
Colorado’s rollout a success, and even Governor Hickenlooper, who initially
opposed Amendment 64 in 2012, recently said this on CBS’s 60 Minutes:
“[A]fter the election [in 2012], if I’d had a magic wand and I could wave the wand, I probably would’ve reversed it and had the initiative fail. But now I look at it…and I think we’ve made a lot of progress…still a lot of work to be done. But I think we might actually create a system that can work.”
We don’t have to go west to know that
regulating marijuana works. Here in our own backyard, state-licensed compassion
centers, which have provided medical marijuana to registered patients for
nearly two years, are running smoothly, giving back to the community, and
creating jobs for local residents.
The notion that we should “wait and
see” is wrongheaded for many reasons, but it is particularly foolish if the
state hopes to reap any economic benefits from regulating and taxing marijuana.
Massachusetts is very likely to approve a ballot initiative to make marijuana
legal for adults in 2016. If Rhode Island does not get the ball rolling this
year, we will lose a tremendous opportunity to attract new businesses to our
state and take home a larger share of the economic pie.
A resurrected specter of “reefer
madness” is the only thing holding us back. Ignoring the clear scientific
evidence that marijuana is much safer than alcohol, opponents of regulating
marijuana are forced to rely on fear tactics and sparse anecdotes to make a
boogeyman out of marijuana.
In truth, however, the vast majority
of adults who use marijuana are responsible, tax-paying citizens who ask only
that they not be automatically treated as lawbreakers. Just as some adults
enjoy the occasional weekend cocktail, or a beer after work, others prefer to
relax and socialize with marijuana.
Every objective, scientific study has
confirmed that marijuana is far less harmful to the individual and society than
alcohol. So if we don’t have an issue with adults who responsibly consume
alcohol, why should we have a problem with adults who responsibly consume
marijuana?
As with any piece of legislation, the
ultimate fate of the Marijuana Regulation, Control, and Taxation Act will
depend mostly on how vigorously our allies in the General Assembly push for its
passage.
Those of us who live in districts with unsupportive legislators must
make the case and show them that their constituents support the bill. Those of
us who live in districts with supportive legislators must be unrelenting in
asking these allies to make the issue a top priority for 2015.
Ultimately, whether Rhode Island
becomes the first state to regulate marijuana on the East Coast is up to us. I
hope you will join me and the rest of the Regulate Rhode Island coalition in
the fight.