Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Question 2 bad for rural Nevada

- By ARNOLD M. KNIGHTLY SPECIAL TO THE REVIEW-JOURNAL

The mad rush to legalize recreation­al marijuana should give us pause, but that seems not to be the case.

Nevada, along with Arizona, California, Massachuse­tts and Maine, is trending toward legalizing pot next month, according to recent polls cited by The Washington Post.

In the Silver State, 57 percent of Nevada residents support legalizati­on through state ballot Question 2, while only 33 percent oppose, according to a recent poll of likely voters conducted by Suffolk University in Boston. ReviewJour­nal polls show the initiative passing, but by a much smaller margin.

These five states would join Colorado, Oregon, Alaska, Washington and the District of Columbia, which have already legalized the drug.

In The New York Times earlier this month, Timothy Eagan, whose work I enjoy, wrote this alarming sentence: “Though (marijuana) legalizati­on is not without its problems — a spike in emergency room visits attributed to edible pot, persistent black market dealers — it’s mostly been no big deal.”

No big deal?

It seems far too early to make this statement because this rush to legalizati­on is happening with little scientific research on the risks to public health.

Colorado, which began its recreation­al marijuana industry in early 2014, has experience­d some alarming trends that should be given more time to play out before Nevada runs headlong into the fray.

While marijuana sales are regulated to adults 21 and over, there has been an increase in youth use between age 12 and 17 in Colorado that cannot be ignored. The state now ranks first in the nation in youth marijuana use, increasing 20 percent in two years since legalizati­on. That is up from 14th in the nation in 2006. According to a national survey by the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administra­tion, nearly 12.56 percent of Colorado youth used marijuana within the past month, far and away the highest percentage in the country.

By comparison, Nevada is at 8 percent.

States with medical marijuana average 8.5 percent use among their youth, while states with recreation­al marijuana show 11.3 percent use. Non-medical marijuana states report a 6 percent use among youth.

How legalizati­on would impact the social health of Nevada, let alone Pahrump and Nye County, which is already suffering from poor access to quality health care, is unknown.

According to a five-year study at Penrose-St. Francis Hospital in Colorado Springs, there has been a sharp increase in emergency room patients who have used cannabis, increasing from 545 to 2,042, between 2009 and 2014. Hospitals are also struggling with collecting millions of dollars in unpaid medical bills tied directly to these patients.

And Colorado is ranked 12th in overall health care, including a ranking of 17th for access to

health care, according to a report in September by WalletHub.com. Nevada ranks 48th in overall health care, and 45th in access to health care. Add to that the report by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute that Nye County is ranked near the bottom of the state as being the most unhealthy.

While Pahrump has emergency medical facilities, areas such as Amargosa Valley, Beatty and on up north through the county do not. Even residents of Tonopah, the county seat, have to travel nearly 100 miles to receive emergency care after their hospital closed last year.

These warning signs point to a public health crisis just waiting to happen.

Nevada’s ballot proponents champion that the industry will raise an estimated $20 million annually for marijuana industry enforcemen­t and schools, as well as another $30 million in state and local sales tax revenue. Comparing it to alcohol, ballot proponents state, “It’s time to stop punishing adults who use marijuana responsibl­y.”

But are we willing to exchange a law enforcemen­t problem and a potential increase in tax revenue for a public health care problem that could end up eating away at the new revenue?

According to Question 2, Nye County would be allowed two retail marijuana store licenses, but officials could petition the state Department of Taxation for more.

While the sale of marijuana would be limited to persons 21 years or older under state law, do we think it would be that hard to get for minors (see our experience­s with beer in high school).

There is another issue hanging over legalizing marijuana anywhere in the United States, even the medical variety: marijuana remains a Schedule 1 drug under federal law. This means that it is viewed as a dangerous drug by the federal government with no medicinal value and is illegal. True, the Obama administra­tion has not stepped in to enforce federal law in areas that have legalized recreation­al marijuana, or the 25 states, including Nevada, that have medical marijuana.

And presidenti­al candidates Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump have given no indication that they will change course. But as long as it remains Schedule 1 — on the same level as LSD, heroin and ecstasy — then the danger remains that a new administra­tion in four-to-eight years could reverse course on marijuana and dismantle the entire industry.

There are bills pending in Congress to reschedule marijuana, including some being supported by U.S. Rep. Dina Titus, a Democrat from Nevada, but none are close to changing the federal laws, yet.

While I support medical marijuana, I will be voting against Question 2 because I don’t believe there is a large enough sample size on marijuana’s impacts, good or bad, to support legalizati­on at this time. Besides, what’s the hurry? Give the industry more time elsewhere to get a more balanced look at the pros and the cons.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States