News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: Rick Steves Lights Up Marijuana Conversation |
Title: | US WA: Rick Steves Lights Up Marijuana Conversation |
Published On: | 2009-02-18 |
Source: | Bellevue Reporter (WA) |
Fetched On: | 2011-03-09 20:10:25 |
RICK STEVES LIGHTS UP MARIJUANA CONVERSATION
Only days after a photo surfaced of Olympic champion swimmer Michael
Phelps smoking marijuana, television host Rick Steves criticized the press
for giving the athlete a hard time.
In his quest to decriminalize marijuana, Steves has criticized local media
as well.
The travel writer produced a televised "infomercial" out of his own pocket
last year to get viewers thinking about the issue, but local television
stations, such as KING, KOMO and KIRO refused to broadcast it or offered 1
a.m. Sunday broadcast times.
"If you care about democracy and it's considered courageous to talk about
a law that is counter-productive, we've got problems," he said.
Host to a sold-out crowd Feb. 4 at the Kirkland Performance Center, Steves
and several other speakers discussed the history of marijuana laws and
their effects for the "Marijuana: It's time for a Conversation" program.
He took the opportunity to criticize local media companies as failing to
foster a dialogue on the issue, claiming the law is more costly than the
drug problem. Steves did acknowledge, however, a unique advantage in
campigning for the issue.
"Nobody can fire me, basically," he said amidst a roar of laughter.
Steves screened the station-censored 30-minute "infomercial," which was
filmed at KOMO's Seattle studios, detailing marijuana's emergence as a
controlled substance after the U.S. prohibition on alcohol was lifted. The
event was co-hosted by the American Civil Liberties Union's director of
drug policy Alison Holcomb and included speakers State Rep. Roger Goodman
(D-Kirkland), Seattle City Councilman Nick Licata and retired Whatcom
Superior Court Judge David Nichols.
Washington State Institute for Public Policy estimates that the state
could save $7.6 million a year if the law were changed, based on the
11,553 misdemeanor arrests made in 2007. The heavy influx, said local
attorney Ken Davidson of Davison, Czeisler and Kilpatric, could be
clogging up the courts. He asked the panel of speakers if using the
criminal justice system was an appropriate use of controlling the drug.
"To file a lawsuit with Superior Court, your trial date is 18 months off,"
Davidson noted. "Justice delayed is often justice denied."
Steves and others also said the mandatory jail time for misdemeanor
possession was in part prompting the need for a proposed regional jail,
which may be built in the Kingsgate/Totem Lake area. According to a 2006
Jail Action Group (JAG) study, about 3 percent of King County misdemeanor
inmates were jailed on drug-related charges.
Former director of the King County Bar Association's drug policy
initiative, Goodman supports a full legalization of regulated quantities
of marijuana as a "soft" drug.
"We've made a lot of progress," he said of legislative efforts to
decriminalize marijuana, including his work on a de-criminalization bill
and with national bar associations, urging them to set up task forces.
"Let's not lock people up so much, let's provide more treatment
opportunities for those who are in trouble. And frankly, let's leave a
bunch of people alone."
Steves urged the audience to contact their local legislators and
councilmembers and talk to them about the issue.
"If I can inspire you to talk about marijuana in polite company, we're all
going to get somewhere," he said.
Several members of the audience were doing just that. Seated in the
audience next to Sammamish Mayor Don Gerend and several Issaquah
Councilmembers, Deputy Mayor Joan McBride said she was enlightened by the
presentation and surprised by some of the presentation's claims, such as
the stiff penalties for posession. Possession of 40 grams of marijuana (a
little over an ounce) or less in Washington state is a misdemeanor offense
that carries a mandatory minimum sentence of one day in jail and a fine of
$250 for the first offense. Any amount over that is a felony, which could
result in up to a 5-year jail term and a $10,000 fine.
"I'm information gathering right now," McBride continued. "I just put in a
call to the chief of police and would like to sit down and talk to him."
In the state legislature, legislation on decriminalizing marijauna is
working its way through both the house and senate. Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles
(D-Seattle) introduced a bill scheduled for a committee hearing this week.
The proposed change would reclassify possession of 40 grams of marijuana
or less to a civil infraction, subject to a $100 fine.
On the enforcement side, Kirkland Police Lt. Bradley Gilmore said the
department goes by state law and hasn't "noticed an upswing" of illegal
marijuana use. "Nothing out of the ordinary."
The KPD made over 200 arrests for marijuana possession last year, making
up the majority of local misdemeanor drug arrests. Police have also
assigned a detective to serve full-time with the Eastside Drug Task Force
(ENTF), a regional drug enforcement initiative started in 1981 and based
in Bellevue.
Only days after a photo surfaced of Olympic champion swimmer Michael
Phelps smoking marijuana, television host Rick Steves criticized the press
for giving the athlete a hard time.
In his quest to decriminalize marijuana, Steves has criticized local media
as well.
The travel writer produced a televised "infomercial" out of his own pocket
last year to get viewers thinking about the issue, but local television
stations, such as KING, KOMO and KIRO refused to broadcast it or offered 1
a.m. Sunday broadcast times.
"If you care about democracy and it's considered courageous to talk about
a law that is counter-productive, we've got problems," he said.
Host to a sold-out crowd Feb. 4 at the Kirkland Performance Center, Steves
and several other speakers discussed the history of marijuana laws and
their effects for the "Marijuana: It's time for a Conversation" program.
He took the opportunity to criticize local media companies as failing to
foster a dialogue on the issue, claiming the law is more costly than the
drug problem. Steves did acknowledge, however, a unique advantage in
campigning for the issue.
"Nobody can fire me, basically," he said amidst a roar of laughter.
Steves screened the station-censored 30-minute "infomercial," which was
filmed at KOMO's Seattle studios, detailing marijuana's emergence as a
controlled substance after the U.S. prohibition on alcohol was lifted. The
event was co-hosted by the American Civil Liberties Union's director of
drug policy Alison Holcomb and included speakers State Rep. Roger Goodman
(D-Kirkland), Seattle City Councilman Nick Licata and retired Whatcom
Superior Court Judge David Nichols.
Washington State Institute for Public Policy estimates that the state
could save $7.6 million a year if the law were changed, based on the
11,553 misdemeanor arrests made in 2007. The heavy influx, said local
attorney Ken Davidson of Davison, Czeisler and Kilpatric, could be
clogging up the courts. He asked the panel of speakers if using the
criminal justice system was an appropriate use of controlling the drug.
"To file a lawsuit with Superior Court, your trial date is 18 months off,"
Davidson noted. "Justice delayed is often justice denied."
Steves and others also said the mandatory jail time for misdemeanor
possession was in part prompting the need for a proposed regional jail,
which may be built in the Kingsgate/Totem Lake area. According to a 2006
Jail Action Group (JAG) study, about 3 percent of King County misdemeanor
inmates were jailed on drug-related charges.
Former director of the King County Bar Association's drug policy
initiative, Goodman supports a full legalization of regulated quantities
of marijuana as a "soft" drug.
"We've made a lot of progress," he said of legislative efforts to
decriminalize marijuana, including his work on a de-criminalization bill
and with national bar associations, urging them to set up task forces.
"Let's not lock people up so much, let's provide more treatment
opportunities for those who are in trouble. And frankly, let's leave a
bunch of people alone."
Steves urged the audience to contact their local legislators and
councilmembers and talk to them about the issue.
"If I can inspire you to talk about marijuana in polite company, we're all
going to get somewhere," he said.
Several members of the audience were doing just that. Seated in the
audience next to Sammamish Mayor Don Gerend and several Issaquah
Councilmembers, Deputy Mayor Joan McBride said she was enlightened by the
presentation and surprised by some of the presentation's claims, such as
the stiff penalties for posession. Possession of 40 grams of marijuana (a
little over an ounce) or less in Washington state is a misdemeanor offense
that carries a mandatory minimum sentence of one day in jail and a fine of
$250 for the first offense. Any amount over that is a felony, which could
result in up to a 5-year jail term and a $10,000 fine.
"I'm information gathering right now," McBride continued. "I just put in a
call to the chief of police and would like to sit down and talk to him."
In the state legislature, legislation on decriminalizing marijauna is
working its way through both the house and senate. Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles
(D-Seattle) introduced a bill scheduled for a committee hearing this week.
The proposed change would reclassify possession of 40 grams of marijuana
or less to a civil infraction, subject to a $100 fine.
On the enforcement side, Kirkland Police Lt. Bradley Gilmore said the
department goes by state law and hasn't "noticed an upswing" of illegal
marijuana use. "Nothing out of the ordinary."
The KPD made over 200 arrests for marijuana possession last year, making
up the majority of local misdemeanor drug arrests. Police have also
assigned a detective to serve full-time with the Eastside Drug Task Force
(ENTF), a regional drug enforcement initiative started in 1981 and based
in Bellevue.
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