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75A - PH - MEDICAL MARIJUANA - PROHIBIT
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75A - PH - MEDICAL MARIJUANA - PROHIBIT
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1/3/2012 4:37:35 PM
Creation date
9/26/2007 2:00:08 PM
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City Clerk
Doc Type
Agenda Packet
Item #
75A
Date
10/1/2007
Destruction Year
2012
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True Agenda? <br />2006 Newsmaker Andrea Tischler: Fighting to legalize marijuana <br />By Sharma McCord Sentinel. staff writer <br />SANTA CRUZ -When city voters passed Measure IC in November, Santa Cruz went <br />on the map as a national leader .in the effort to legalize marijuana. Measure K forces <br />Santa Cruz police officers to make adult marijuana crimes their lowest priority. The <br />measure, primarily organized by Andrea Tischler, won easily with more than 60 percent <br />voter approval. But Measure K is not just about Santa Cruz. its design is part of a <br />natio~iwide strategy to convince state anal federal governments that marijuana should be a <br />legal drug -taxed and regulated like alcohol and tobacco. "This really is an interim <br />measure on the way to frill. legalization of marijuana for personal use," said Tischler, a <br />longtime leader in many local marijuana causes. "It's happening city by city. We're <br />moving in that direction of legalizing marijuana in the state," she said. The federal <br />government, however, has not wavered on its stance that marijuana is an illegal drug. <br />Since California voters approved Proposition 215 in 1996 to allow sick people to use <br />marijuana to ease pain and suffering, the medical marijuana cause has faced numerous <br />lawsuits and investigations by federal authorities. Measure K faces potential legal <br />problems as police are sworn to uphold state laws, which say marijuana is an illegal drug <br />when used recreationally, Any effort to legalize the drug is expected to be hard-fought in <br />court. Tischler, who recently closed the medical marijuana bed and breakfast she and her <br />partner had run for six years on Laurel Street. anal moved to Hawaii, stumbled into the <br />marijuana movement in the 1960s, a decade synonymous with liberal attitudes. <br />She was 22 and teaching social studies at a Chicago high school u~ 1965 when some <br />colleagues offered Tischler her first joint. "I said, 'Geez, this isn't bad.' I didn't have a <br />hangover the next morning line I did with alcohol," she said.. From that first experience, <br />Tischler has been fighting for the right to smoke pot legally. ".It's the same as someone <br />coming home from work and having a couple of martinis," she said. After stints in Guam <br />and San Francisco, Tischler moved to Davenport in 1988 and quickly became involved in <br />local marijuana issues. In 1994, Tischler convinced administrators at Pacific Elementary <br />School in Davenport, which her son attended, to drop the DARE program because she <br />believed nurses should be teaching the effects of drugs, not police officers. <br />Marijuana issues are Tischler's cause celebre. She believes the drug is no worse for the <br />human body than alcohol and tobacco. "Marijuana makes people peaceful in their hearts <br />and in their minds," she said. Due to the work of Tischler and others who share her <br />passion for pat, ordinances similar to Measure K have been passed in cities such as <br />Oakland, Seattle, Santa Monica, Santa Barbara and San Francisco. More are on the way, <br />she said. The ordinances to make marijuana crimes a low priority for police seem. to be <br />picking up momentum across the county. Mike Corral, who founded the Wo/Man's <br />Medical Marijuana co-op in 1993 with his wife, Valerie, believes legalized marijuana <br />would allow police to focus on more serious crimes and generate more revenue for the <br />government in the form of new taxes. Government regulation of pot also would produce a <br />safer, higher quality product, Corral said. "I see general legalization as a win-win <br />situation all around," he said. "There is a bigger wave building in America around general <br />Legalization." Local police have said Measure K could hinder law enforcement efforts <br />because marijuana is involved in many crimes in Santa Cruz. <br />19 <br />75A-93 <br />
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