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News (Media Awareness Project) - US MA: Column: How Cool Is 13th District To Pot?
Title:US MA: Column: How Cool Is 13th District To Pot?
Published On:2010-10-27
Source:Worcester Telegram & Gazette (MA)
Fetched On:2010-10-28 15:01:42
HOW COOL IS 13TH DISTRICT TO POT?

I called the three men - John Mahoney, Paul Franco and Ron Madnick -
vying to be the people's choice for state representative in the 13th
Worcester District, to ask if it would be cool for members of their
constituency to smoke a little marijuana, blow a blunt, puff some
ganja now and then for their individual health.

I raised the question because Central Massachusetts residents in the
13th, the 18th and the 1st Hampden districts will this year have the
chance to vote on a ballot question asking whether their state
representative should be instructed to vote in favor of "legislation
that would allow patients, with their doctor's written recommendation,
to posses, grow and purchase marijuana for medical use?"

Additionally, voters in the 3rd Middlesex District will face a ballot
question asking whether their state representative should be
instructed to vote in favor of legislation allowing the state to
regulate the taxation, cultivation and sale of marijuana to adults.

In total, there are 18 state representative districts, comprising 73
cities and towns, in which residents will be voting on these
nonbinding medical marijuana use and marijuana legalization ballot
questions.

Although nonbinding, the ballot questions will nevertheless give us a
pretty good gauge of the appetite in Central Massachusetts and around
the state for additional marijuana reform.

Since 2000, according to the Drug Policy Forum of Massachusetts,
"voters in over 140 towns representing more than one-third of the
commonwealth have voted decisively in favor of marijuana reform,"
through these nonbinding ballot initiatives. And of course, in 2008,
Massachusetts voters, by a 65 percent margin, approved a very binding
and historic state decriminalization referendum.

In an article published earlier this year, John Leonard, clerk of
DPFMA, noted that the districts in which the ballot questions are
placed are not chosen by random.

"We look at the real enemies of marijuana reform and target those
districts," he said. "We can go into a district and win by 60 percent
or 70 percent, and if it doesn't change the legislator's mind, it will
at least silence him. It has the effects of quieting down a lot of
opposition."

Time will tell, but as of now, Mr. Mahoney said he would favor
patients under a doctor's care being prescribed marijuana for certain
therapies. He would, however, be against allowing individuals to grow
their personal stash.

"I am worried about overlapping jurisdiction and other complications
that would come about," he said. "If someone steals (an individual's)
plants, are they going to call the police?"

Mr. Franco said he couldn't support the ballot question at this time,
and would want to hear from the district attorney's office and other
law enforcement officials, before addressing the issue.

Mr. Madnick, who helped put the medicinal marijuana measure on the
ballot in the 13th district this year and in the 14th district last
year, didn't have those concerns.

He noted that two retired Boston police officers were the front men
for Question 2, the ballot in 2008 that led to the decriminalization
of small amounts of marijuana in the state, and that in California, a
former San Jose police chief is one of the front men for that state's
effort to legalize, tax and regulate marijuana

"I have knocked on hundreds of doors this campaign season and have
spoken to a lot of doctors and nurses and every single one has told me
the same thing, (marijuana) it has medicinal value. It can be used for
nausea and other side effects. It has been placed on the ballot in
Massachusetts for years and has passed every single time.

"The doctors say it is good, and the people want it. That is clear.
What is wrong with the politicians?"

The answer, Ron, is that they smoke, but don't inhale.
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