Darby.beck@leap.cc February 25, 2015
415.823.5496
DC MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION TAKES EFFECT THURSDAY
Adult Possession, Home Cultivation Protected Under Initiative 71
DC Council Pushes for Retail Sales Despite Congress
Washington D.C. – A new marijuana legalization law will take effect in D.C. tomorrow
when adults 21 and older will be permitted to possess up to two ounces for personal use
and grow up to six plants (three of which can be mature). Public consumption, driving
under the influence, youth possession and any exchange of money for marijuana outside
of the existing medical marijuana dispensaries in the District, will still be prohibited.
“Legalization has come to Congress’s backyard,” said Maj. Neill Franklin (Ret.),
executive director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), an organization of
criminal justice professionals opposed to the drug war. “The only question now is will
they be the leaders their constituents voted for and allow the DC Council to tax and
regulate the product, or will they prop up the criminal market by keeping sales
underground?”
Initiative 71 passed overwhelmingly with more than 70% of the vote. Despite some
Congressional opposition to taxing and regulating recreational marijuana sales, the D.C.
Council is pushing forward a legalization bill that responsibly addresses the public safety
issues associated with marijuana regulation. The Marijuana Legalization and Regulation
Act of 2015 has already been discussed in public hearings. A majority of the testimony
was in favor of the bill, and made a variety of arguments such as focusing law
enforcement on more important crimes, reducing the racially disparate impact of
marijuana enforcement, reducing youth access to marijuana, generating revenue for the
city, and creating new legal jobs for D.C. residents.
Under the law that takes effect tomorrow, possession or smoking on federal property
(which amounts to 26% of the land in D.C.) remains a federal crime. Caution should be
taken by those traveling with the permitted amount of marijuana to avoid federal
property. District residents are advised to review a map of federal land and some basic
rules in order to comply with the complex interplay of federal and District laws.
The spending bill passed by Congress in December for this fiscal year denies D.C. any
funding to enact marijuana legalization. But because D.C. attorneys have determined that
Initiative 71 requires no funding to implement, with the Congressional review period
required by the D.C. home rule law about to expire, the law is set to take effect at 12:01
a.m. Feb. 26.
LEAP is committed to ending the failed drug policies that have fueled dangerous
underground markets and gang violence, fostered corruption and racially disparate law
enforcement, and largely ignored the public health crisis of addiction, diverting the penal
system's attention from more important violent crime, all while spending almost one
trillion dollars over the past 40 years.
Interesting concept: It takes no funds to enforce a law that simply says you CAN do something. The only expense will be to enforce things that you already could not do, e.g., sell marijuana to minors. So I agree, implementing this law will take no new funding at all.
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