Boston Herald

Experience shows little impact on safety

- By ANGELA DILLS, SIETSE GOFFARD and JEFFREY MIRON Angela Dills is a professor of regional economic developmen­t at Western Carolina University. Sietse Goffard is an analyst at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and a researcher in the Economics Depar

In November 2012, Colorado and Washington approved ballot initiative­s that legalized marijuana for recreation­al purposes under state law. Two years later, Alaska and Oregon followed suit. This November, Massachuse­tts will be among five additional states — along with California, Arizona, Nevada and Maine — to vote on similar measures, and four others (Florida, Arkansas, North Dakota, and Montana) will vote on whether to legalize marijuana for medical purposes.

Advocates believe that legalizati­on reduces crime, raises revenue, lowers criminal justice expenditur­e, improves public health, improves traffic safety, and stimulates the economy. Critics assert that legalizati­on spurs marijuana and other drug or alcohol use, increases crime, diminishes traffic safety, harms public health, and lowers teen educationa­l achievemen­t. Systematic evaluation of these claims post-legalizati­on, however, has been limited.

In a recent policy analysis just published by the Cato Institute, we examine the impact to date of marijuana legalizati­on and related policies in Colorado, Washington, Oregon, and Alaska.

Each of these four legalizati­ons occurred recently, and each rolled out gradually over several years.

Our analysis compares the pre- and post-policy-change paths of marijuana, other drug or alcohol use, marijuana prices, crime, traffic accidents, teen educationa­l outcomes, public health, tax revenues, criminal justice expenditur­es, and economic outcomes.

We conclude that statelevel marijuana legalizati­ons to date have been associated with at most modest changes in marijuana use and related outcomes.

Particular­ly striking is the absence of significan­t adverse consequenc­es from legalizati­on, given the sometimes dire prediction­s made by legalizati­on opponents. In the aftermath of legalizati­on, crime has not soared. Road accidents show no significan­t uptick. Emergency treatment center admissions remain steady. Marijuana use, while still on an upward trend, displays no accelerati­on. And use of harder substances actually begins to trend downwards, suggesting that the “gateway” phenomenon has not materializ­ed.

Our analysis does not, by itself, determine whether legalizati­on is wise policy. Ardent critics can assert that increased misuse and other unwanted side effects will boom after more time has passed; our results cannot address this assertion. Alternativ­ely, critics sometimes argue against legalizati­on based on ethical, religious, or moral claims, independen­t of measurable outcomes.

Most critics, however, have based their opposition on claims that legalizati­on will unleash rapid and dramatic increases in marijuana use and the possible adverse consequenc­es of that use. Our study reveals no substantia­l evidence that supports these strong hypotheses.

A different question is whether legalizati­on proponents should have to prove marijuana’s safety

beyond all doubt before it can become legal. The answer should be obvious: no one has ever required advocates of legal alcohol, tobacco, automobile­s, downhill skiing, or triplecrea­m cheeses to prove

beyond all doubt that these goods do not, sometimes, have serious long-term consequenc­es. In fact, each of these, plus innumerabl­e other goods and services, can harm those who consume them, or others, when misused.

But in a free society, the presumptio­n must be that every good, service, action or activity is legal except when compelling evidence shows that use causes substantia­l harm to innocent third parties and that the costs of regulation or prohibitio­n are smaller than those of the goods or actions themselves. Our research, like that of many others, suggests that no such case exists for marijuana.

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