News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: PUB LTE: Outlawing Marijuana Costly |
Title: | US WA: PUB LTE: Outlawing Marijuana Costly |
Published On: | 2010-02-07 |
Source: | Spokesman-Review (Spokane, WA) |
Fetched On: | 2010-04-02 12:57:04 |
OUTLAWING MARIJUANA COSTLY
Your opinion that the Legislature should postpone consideration of
marijuana decriminalization ("Weed out lesser ideas in a difficult
short session," Jan. 22) de-emphasizes important facts. Washington's
justice system is disastrously overburdened and underfunded. The
Office of Financial Management projects an annual savings of $16
million and new revenue of $1 million if Senate Bill 5615 passes.
In a time when court staff are being furloughed, and prosecutors and
public defenders are being fired, we literally cannot afford to ignore
those numbers.
We have decades of proof that treating marijuana use as a crime is a
failed strategy. Severe tactics have done little to achieve their
intended goals. From 1991 to 2007, marijuana arrests nationwide nearly
tripled. They currently make up almost half of all drug arrests.
The 12 states which decriminalized marijuana saw no ill effects. These
states have not seen an increase in use. Cities and counties, such as
Seattle, which have adopted "lowest law enforcement priority"
ordinances have not experienced increases in use.
It is time to put our efforts, and our money, elsewhere. We can no
longer continue to waste our limited resources enforcing a policy that
just isn't working for Washington.
Phillip Wetzel
Spokane
Your opinion that the Legislature should postpone consideration of
marijuana decriminalization ("Weed out lesser ideas in a difficult
short session," Jan. 22) de-emphasizes important facts. Washington's
justice system is disastrously overburdened and underfunded. The
Office of Financial Management projects an annual savings of $16
million and new revenue of $1 million if Senate Bill 5615 passes.
In a time when court staff are being furloughed, and prosecutors and
public defenders are being fired, we literally cannot afford to ignore
those numbers.
We have decades of proof that treating marijuana use as a crime is a
failed strategy. Severe tactics have done little to achieve their
intended goals. From 1991 to 2007, marijuana arrests nationwide nearly
tripled. They currently make up almost half of all drug arrests.
The 12 states which decriminalized marijuana saw no ill effects. These
states have not seen an increase in use. Cities and counties, such as
Seattle, which have adopted "lowest law enforcement priority"
ordinances have not experienced increases in use.
It is time to put our efforts, and our money, elsewhere. We can no
longer continue to waste our limited resources enforcing a policy that
just isn't working for Washington.
Phillip Wetzel
Spokane
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