Pubdate: Mon, 22 Sep 2014 Source: Walla Walla Union-Bulletin (WA) Copyright: 2014 Walla Walla Union-Bulletin Contact: http://www.union-bulletin.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2619 Author: Dawn Meicher WE CANNOT BAN AWAY POT I'm thankful for the overwhelming support I received after speaking to Dayton City Council against the moratoriums on recreational and medical marijuana-related industry. More amazing since local papers whitewashed the details, I appreciate the U-B's reporting the issues I presented. Legalization has freed my patients to discuss pot use, encouraging real discussion. These are professionals and business owners, workers afraid to speak prior fearing backlash and prejudice. I try to educate on marijuana use, side effects and safety in a realistic manner wishing I had more data. But, since it is illegal under federal law, studies on marijuana are few. Education for health care providers is becoming available. I can't think of these patients as outcasts. I am shocked local councils deny that society is treating pot in a new way. Prohibition since 1937 did not make marijuana go away. Its militarized police forces, caused untold grief - more than from the drug itself - from prosecution, harsh sentences, overcrowded expensive prisons; yet pot survived. Humans overuse many things - caffeine, nicotine, alcohol, sex, sugar, exercise, gambling, but none are illegal. All cause immeasurable harm in some people. Risky behavior by kids and adults is a social, public health and mental health problem, not criminal. Apply the social and legal standings of wine to marijuana; relieve police of paperwork. Hard liquor is in local groceries, advertised out front. Treating wine so highly while denying pot as an industry, a social pleasure and a medicine is ludicrous. Marijuana is showing promise on the medical front for multiple conditions. We need to allow study. Why deny its possibilities? Certifications for workers, college courses? A trillion dollars from the war on drugs, spent on addiction and mental health care? Federal scheduling of marijuana, stricter than morphine, sends false messages that schedule II (oxycodone) or III (hydrocodone until Oct. 6) drugs are safer than pot. Yet pot survives. Pot can be as intoxicating as alcohol, but no confirmed OD deaths; opiates are epidemic and cause death daily. Mental health, addiction treatment, medical beds are needed more than prison beds. We cannot ban away pot. Voting to ban keeps black markets intact, products untested for contaminants, no age checks, no safety education, keeps grows on public lands, yet no tax money. For patients, I want safety. Marijuana - harmful or helpful, like many drugs I prescribe as a nurse practitioner - has side effects, but enough NIMBY, pot is already there. Dawn Meicher Dayton - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom