News (Media Awareness Project) - US MA: Changes To Marijuana Law Gain Momentum |
Title: | US MA: Changes To Marijuana Law Gain Momentum |
Published On: | 2004-11-06 |
Source: | Salem News (MA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-17 19:43:05 |
CHANGES TO MARIJUANA LAW GAIN MOMENTUM
PEABODY - When state Sen. Frederick Berry voted Tuesday, he first
marked the ballot lines for all his favorite Democrats and then
considered the nonbinding referendum question at the bottom.
"Shall the state senator from this district be instructed to
introduce and vote in favor of legislation making possession of
marijuana a civil violation, like a traffic ticket..."
Berry voted "Yes," essentially instructing himself to work to change
the state's drug laws. More than 13,600 other citizens in this city
voted the same way. But Berry is the Senate minority leader, one of
the most powerful positions at the Statehouse. While he's not a big
proponent of referendum questions like this one, he's been thinking
for years that the state's marijuana laws need revision.
And judging by his chats with other lawmakers, he is not alone. "I
think it is a total waste of money when people found with a small
amount of marijuana are tying up the court system," Berry said. Berry
is also concerned that judges do not have the freedom to make
sentencing decisions on a case-by-case basis. Judges are restricted
by minimum-sentencing guidelines included in the state's drug laws,
most of which were set up in the 1980s.
"In the final analysis, we ought to give judges a little more
freedom," be said. Berry has no plans to file legislation to change
the marijuana laws, he said, but he knows Sen. Cynthia Stone Creem of
Newton does. And there seems to be growing support among state
officials to take action. "I think a lot of senators would like to
revisit this," Berry said. "I would probably prefer to see some sort
of commission set up to look at the whole problem of drugs and
sentencing."
That does not mean that by the end of the next legislative session it
will be as permissible to smoke a joint as it is to drive 45 mph in a
35 mph zone. But the times, as they say, may be changing. Since the
2000 election, 28 municipalities in Essex County have endorsed some
sort of change in the drug laws, according to the pro-pot lobby group
NORML.
In Tuesday's election, Salem, Beverly, Danvers, Peabody, Topsfield,
Marblehead and Swampscott all endorsed a change in the penalty for
marijuana possession, typically by about a 2-to-l margin.
"Slowly but surely, progress is being made," said Steven Epstein, the
Georgetown attorney leading the local pro-pot push. "We have hopes
that within the next legislative session while we may not pass the
legislation because the governor may veto it and it may not move in
the House we think as a money-making proposition, this could pass
the Senate," he said. "Or at least get a vote."
Epstein said the fines associated with making marijuana possession a
civil offense could help local communities because at last half of
the money would go to the city or town where the offense occurred.
The other reason to change the laws, he said, is for the children.
"One of the things we are looking for is to keep handcuffs off our
children and keep criminal records off their backs," he said. As to
why there appears to be increasing agreement locally that the laws
must change, Epstein said it's because the drug is no longer as taboo
as it was, say, 20 years ago.
"We all know people who have used it," he said, "and we all know
that, for the most part, they are all pretty good people. Some of
them are even politicians."
PEABODY - When state Sen. Frederick Berry voted Tuesday, he first
marked the ballot lines for all his favorite Democrats and then
considered the nonbinding referendum question at the bottom.
"Shall the state senator from this district be instructed to
introduce and vote in favor of legislation making possession of
marijuana a civil violation, like a traffic ticket..."
Berry voted "Yes," essentially instructing himself to work to change
the state's drug laws. More than 13,600 other citizens in this city
voted the same way. But Berry is the Senate minority leader, one of
the most powerful positions at the Statehouse. While he's not a big
proponent of referendum questions like this one, he's been thinking
for years that the state's marijuana laws need revision.
And judging by his chats with other lawmakers, he is not alone. "I
think it is a total waste of money when people found with a small
amount of marijuana are tying up the court system," Berry said. Berry
is also concerned that judges do not have the freedom to make
sentencing decisions on a case-by-case basis. Judges are restricted
by minimum-sentencing guidelines included in the state's drug laws,
most of which were set up in the 1980s.
"In the final analysis, we ought to give judges a little more
freedom," be said. Berry has no plans to file legislation to change
the marijuana laws, he said, but he knows Sen. Cynthia Stone Creem of
Newton does. And there seems to be growing support among state
officials to take action. "I think a lot of senators would like to
revisit this," Berry said. "I would probably prefer to see some sort
of commission set up to look at the whole problem of drugs and
sentencing."
That does not mean that by the end of the next legislative session it
will be as permissible to smoke a joint as it is to drive 45 mph in a
35 mph zone. But the times, as they say, may be changing. Since the
2000 election, 28 municipalities in Essex County have endorsed some
sort of change in the drug laws, according to the pro-pot lobby group
NORML.
In Tuesday's election, Salem, Beverly, Danvers, Peabody, Topsfield,
Marblehead and Swampscott all endorsed a change in the penalty for
marijuana possession, typically by about a 2-to-l margin.
"Slowly but surely, progress is being made," said Steven Epstein, the
Georgetown attorney leading the local pro-pot push. "We have hopes
that within the next legislative session while we may not pass the
legislation because the governor may veto it and it may not move in
the House we think as a money-making proposition, this could pass
the Senate," he said. "Or at least get a vote."
Epstein said the fines associated with making marijuana possession a
civil offense could help local communities because at last half of
the money would go to the city or town where the offense occurred.
The other reason to change the laws, he said, is for the children.
"One of the things we are looking for is to keep handcuffs off our
children and keep criminal records off their backs," he said. As to
why there appears to be increasing agreement locally that the laws
must change, Epstein said it's because the drug is no longer as taboo
as it was, say, 20 years ago.
"We all know people who have used it," he said, "and we all know
that, for the most part, they are all pretty good people. Some of
them are even politicians."
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