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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CO: Denver Did It - Could Telluride Legalize Marijuana?
Title:US CO: Denver Did It - Could Telluride Legalize Marijuana?
Published On:2007-11-07
Source:Telluride Daily Planet (CO)
Fetched On:2008-01-11 19:02:17
DENVER DID IT - COULD TELLURIDE LEGALIZE MARIJUANA?

Telluride, Colo. - The city of Denver passed another marijuana law
Tuesday. The city that already legalized pot told the city's cops to
make marijuana possession their "lowest law-enforcement priority."

Sound familiar?

It should. In 2005, a similar measure narrowly failed in Telluride,
332-308. But the success of anti-prohibition laws in Denver, Seattle,
Oakland and other cities has encouraged one local activist to
consider giving it another shot here.

"It's worked great in a lot of cities," says Ernest Eich, who
supported and promoted the 2005 initiative. "Is Telluride really less
progressive than Denver?"

The 2005 Telluride ballot initiative, called Question 200, asked cops
to lay off and also advocated a national system of legalization and taxation.

"After the last initiative it's always been the goal to do another
one, we just got to see the right formulation and see what's the
right way to go with it," Eich says. "It'd be interesting to see what
other people in the community want to do."

Next time, Eich says, it might help to throw out the complicated
language and ambitious national goals. It might be simpler to write
an initiative that says, essentially, that Telluride - or San Miguel
County - legalizes marijuana.

He's looking for people interested in reform.

Sheriff Bill Masters, a libertarian, thinks marijuana prohibition
should end statewide and nationwide. He's written a book called "Drug
War Addiction," about the ways national drug policy has failed.

But he isn't sure San Miguel County is the place to start changes.

"If you want to change the law, don't do this stuff per community, go
and change the law on the state level," he says. "It's a mistake to
have our community be singled out as the one that allows that. We
don't want people coming here because they can smoke marijuana."

Telluride Marshal Jim Kolar didn't want any changes.

"I'd argue against that," he says. "It's still illegal in the state
and federally, and there's too many health and safety issues. I
wouldn't want to put more people that are out in the streets that are
under the influence of substances."

Denver is the only city in the country to have "legalized" marijuana,
though many have passed laws instructing the cops to stop harshing on
tokers: Oakland, West Hollywood, Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz, Missoula
County, Mont., Eureka Springs, Ark.

Bruce Mirken, communications director for the Washington, D.C.-based
Marijuana Policy Project, believes that each campaign that points out
simple facts about pot - that marijuana use doesn't kill people, that
it doesn't make people more aggressive or contribute to crime, that
it's less dangerous than alcohol in a number of ways, that we're
talking about our basic freedoms - has some effect on getting
marijuana policy changed on a national level.

"You've got to give it to Mason [Tvert] and his group in Denver,
[SAFER], they have nailed it absolutely on the head - this is a drug
that is much safer than alcohol," Mirken says. "If our laws are to
have some reasonable relationship to facts, the way we handle
marijuana and alcohol and tobacco has got to change."

Not everyone agrees. Mike Dorsey, a second homeowner, sees marijuana
as a dangerous drug, and sees legalization not as a victory for
freedom but as "encouraging drug use."

It's not clear what real effect "legalizing" pot locally would have.

Marijuana is still outlawed by the state and country. Legalizing pot
in Denver didn't stop the cops from citing people for pot - which was
the reason for the most recent vote on "lowest law enforcement priority."

But Mirken, for one, thinks any change is positive change.

"I really do think that votes we're seeing in Denver and elsewhere
are the equivalent of the first brick coming out of the Berlin Wall,"
Mirken says. "Prohibition is so destructive, and costly and stupid
and pointless ... that I do think it's going to collapse of its own
accord. And I think we might be getting close to that tipping point."
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