Editor’s
note: Today’s editorials originally appeared in The Columbian.
Editorial content from other publications is provided to give readers a
sampling of regional and national opinion and does not necessarily
reflect positions endorsed by the Editorial Board of The Daily News.
Nearly
five years after Washington voters approved the legalization of
recreational marijuana use for adults, the issue is far from settled.
Now,
with indications that U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions is preparing
to enforce federal law that conflicts with marijuana legalization, it is
imperative that Congress act to reconcile that law with growing public
sentiment that favors legalization. Members of Congress should seek to
protect industries in states that allow marijuana use and to avoid a
costly and counterproductive legal battle between those states and the
federal government.
As
The Hill reported this week: “President Trump’s Task Force on Crime
Reduction and Public Safety, led by Sessions, is expected to release a
report next week that criminal justice reform advocates fear will link
marijuana to violent crime and recommend tougher sentences for those
caught growing, selling and smoking the plant.”
Concern
from advocates for legalization is understandable. Before becoming
attorney general, Sessions delivered some eyebrow-raising quotes about
marijuana, such as “good people don’t smoke marijuana” and that he
thought members of the Ku Klux Klan were “OK, until I found out they
smoked pot.” If there is, indeed, evidence that links marijuana to
violent crime, that evidence should be taken into consideration. But the
administration’s frequent embrace of alternative facts would lead to
reasonable doubt about any such findings.
Washington voters approved
recreational marijuana in 2012 with 56 percent of the vote (in Clark
County, the measure was opposed by 50.3 percent of voters). Since the
industry was launched in 2013, it has generated more than $2 billion in
revenue and more than $400 million in taxes. The city of Vancouver
receives about $500,000 a year in marijuana taxes, money that is being
used to support the local police department.
Tax
revenue is not reason enough to support legalization. But as The
Columbian noted in 2012 while editorially advocating for legalization,
the United States’ decades-long War on Drugs proved to have exorbitant
financial and social costs while providing few benefits. That does not
mean that we advocate the use of marijuana; it is a drug that can have
negative health consequences. But it does mean that a concentrated
federal effort to crack down on the use of marijuana by adults is a
waste of time and money.
Washington
Attorney General Bob Ferguson and Gov. Jay Inslee have vowed to resist
any attempt by the federal government to override states’ rights
regarding marijuana. “Given the limited resources available for
marijuana law enforcement, a return to ‘full prohibition’ is highly
unlikely to end the illicit production, trafficking and consumption of
marijuana,” they noted in a letter to the administration. Considering
that polls consistently show a strong majority of the American public
favors legalization, Inslee said the administration “would be on the
wrong side of history” if it chooses to rekindle prohibition.
Marijuana
possession and use is still prohibited under federal law, and while
Ferguson has argued that does not preempt state law, the issue likely
would be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. As Sessions said during his
confirmation hearing earlier this year, “If that’s something that’s not
desired any longer, Congress should pass a law to change the rule.”
Indeed.
Instead of allowing an archaic federal law to override state
sovereignty, the issue should be settled by lawmakers. It is only
through a common-sense adjustment to an outdated marijuana prohibition
that the issue will finally be settled.
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