Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Legalizing It

Three measures in Olympia could change the way Washington state looks at pot.

Nicholas Deshais

It's medicine. It’s like liquor. It’s worth $400 million. It’s illegal. This is your state on marijuana.

Three measures working their way through Olympia right now aim to change the way the state deals with marijuana, including legalizing it, making it easier for sick people to procure it and taxing the hell out of it. The legislation could give Washington the loosest marijuana laws in the nation.

“We’re not a bellwether state, but there’s more going on here than anywhere else,” says Kevin Oliver, executive director for the state chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, or NORML. “We can stimulate the national conversation.”

“Legalization’s time is soon arriving,” says state Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles (D-Seattle). “There’s a lot of momentum going on around the country for this. The time is coming.”

Kohl-Welles has introduced a bill (SB 5073) that would make the state’s already numerous dispensaries legal, and give patients and providers stronger legal protections. The bill has already had a public hearing and observers say it’s more likely to succeed than any of the measures being proposed.

State Rep. Mary Lou Dickerson, also a Seattle Democrat, is attempting to fully legalize pot. Her bill (HB 1550) would allow the drug to be sold in state-controlled liquor stores and would tax it at 15 percent to support state health and substance-abuse programs. She says her plan could bring in an additional $400 million to the state’s coffers every two years.

And Sensible Washington, a nonprofit dedicated to legalizing marijuana, submitted an initiative to legalize pot to the secretary of state’s office for approval last week. The measure would remove civil and criminal penalties for adults possessing, selling or growing marijuana. It also directs the Legislature to regulate and tax pot “at its earliest opportunity.”

If any of the three measures succeed, Washington will either lead the country in legalizing all pot use, or stand with California and Colorado, two states where the medical marijuana dispensary industry now thrives.

And if Washington leads the nation, some say Spokane is pointing the way.

“It’s like a starter gun went off out there about six months ago,” says Philip Dawdy, media and policy director for the Washington Cannabis Association, a medical marijuana lobbying group. “You went from two or three or four dispensaries a year ago … and there’s like 34 now. In the city of Seattle, there’s less than 20.

“Spokamsterdam is what it’s being called,” he says.

Currently, state law regulates many aspects of medical marijuana, but it’s silent on the subject of dispensaries. “They’re neither legal nor illegal according to state law,” Dawdy says.

It’s this silence, Kohl-Welles says, that’s hurting people.

“We have a very flawed law,” she says. “Law enforcement has mixed views if dispensaries are the way to go, but they know we need to do something. … And what we need to provide is a bright line so law enforcement knows who is and who is not a patient,” she says. If her law passes, patients will be able to buy “from a licensed dispensary a product that’s been grown by licensed growers.” And though she says raising revenue is not her paramount goal, it’s an added benefit.

Kohl-Welles’ law will provide “real access to a safe, secure, reliable source,” she says. “I’m doing it for protection of the patients.”

Which is why Dawdy’s group has put its effort behind the Kohl-Welles bill.

“Under current law, you just have affirmative defense,” Dawdy says. “That means if a cop feels like wrecking your day, he can wreck your day. … It’s an after-the-fact defense, essentially.”

All these complications — and more — could be avoided if marijuana were fully legal, says Douglas Hiatt, an attorney leading the statewide initiative effort.

“It makes sense in about 30 different ways,” he says. “You protect recreational users. You save $120 to $150 million a year in the [state’s] criminal justice system.”

Hiatt says that farmers and housewives in Wenatchee, residents on Bainbridge Island, and tribal members in Colville (who are interested in planting hemp) support the initiative.

Which is all very impressive — until you realize that a very similar measure proposed by Hiatt’s group came 50,000 signatures short of even reaching the ballot last year.

“We never failed. We never got the vote,” he says, suggesting the outcome might have been different if all voters had a chance to weigh in. “What’s going to get us more signatures [this year] is we’re ten times bigger, literally ten times bigger, than we were last year.” The group has already raised more money than they spent in the entire campaign last year.

“The politicians we have are completely failing us,” he says. “We want to do something now that works. … I mean, we all know prohibition doesn’t work.

Also in News

Calling for Help

A frantic 911 call lands Christopher Parker in a jail cell instead of a hospital, and leads to his death

Jacob Jones |
Wednesday, May 22,2013

Let 'Em Vote

Spokane City Council won’t sue to keep initiatives off of the fall ballot; plus, a new UW-WSU rivalry

Heidi Groover, Deanna Pan, Daniel Walters |
Wednesday, May 22,2013

Reefer Rules

Washington state takes a first pass at marijuana market regulations

Heidi Groover, Lisa Waananen |
Wednesday, May 22,2013

Disorderly Conduct

Three Spokane law enforcement officers are placed on leave over misconduct investigations

Jacob Jones |
Wednesday, May 22,2013

Uneven Cuts

Most elements of health care were shielded from the sequester — but not the Indian Health Service

Daniel Walters |
Wednesday, May 22,2013

Also By Nicholas Deshais

Cheap Eats

Fish Taco Throwdown

Fish tacos rule — but which taco rules them all?

Nicholas Deshais |
Wednesday, January 26,2011

The Results Are In

Verner's down, Stuckart is up, Spokane leans rightward

Nicholas Deshais |
Tuesday, November 8,2011

Shot and Killed

Local law enforcement has killed four people in the past four months. Coincidence or a sign of the future?

Jacob H. Fries, Kevin Taylor, Nicholas Deshais |
Tuesday, December 14,2010
News Briefs

The Fagan Strikes Back

Fagan re-files, phosphorus is limited (sort of), and Jon Snyder reminds us of Anakin Skywalker.

Nicholas Deshais |
Wednesday, May 26,2010

Squashed?

The governor says she won’t sign the dispensary bill. Will lawmakers’ work go up in smoke?

Nicholas Deshais |
Tuesday, April 19,2011


Marijuana is the safest drug with actual benefits for the user as opposed to alcohol which is dangerous, causes addiction, birth defects, and affects literally every organ in the body. Groups are organizing all over the country to speak their minds on reforming pot laws. I drew up a very cool poster for the cause which you can check out on my artist’s blog at http://dregstudiosart.blogspot.com/2011/01/vote-teapot-2011.html Drop in and let me know what you think! Feb 03, 2011 | Reply to this comment

 

We need to end the madness and end prohibition. Feb 04, 2011 | Reply to this comment

 

I am really impressed with the politicians in Washington State. I am glad to see some common sense being used on reforming this "War on Drugs". The United States has the highest prison population per capita in the world. Doesn´t make sense. I am glad that these politicians have taken a stand to improve things. Hopefully other states will follow this courageous step and enact similar measures. If other states follow this lead it will force national drug reform at the federal level in Washington D.C. Feb 04, 2011 | Reply to this comment

 

The War on Drugs started with George Bush and didn´t he have his hand in the cookie jar there?

To think we can barge into our neighbors house in Canada and extradite Marc Emery for simply giving god given seeds to the World and pushing him with prison for our insane drug laws that we fail to regulate in our own mail system is like an act of War it´s self isn´t it?

What would Gorge Washington think of all this?

Hemp could be helping with our oil problem and peace loving hippies are in jail because of this archaic afterthought few still view as the status quo.

It´s already legal in reality. There are laws out there on the books that say you can´t eat ice cream on Sunday. I´ve seen people testify they´ve tried chemo, they tried radiation for their cancer and those only made it worse. If they come around and say a teaspoon of Marijuana extract helped get rid of their cancer what are we waiting for?

Almost half the people out there get cancer. It should be like something we get when we go to get groceries in the produce department next to stuff like oregano. Whoever dreamed of locking people up for herbs? People of all walks of life are done hiding. The people are the law and we want things changed. Feb 10, 2011 | Reply to this comment

 

 
 
Close
Close
Close