Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Lawmaker overstates youth pot claim

- Madeline Heim USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN

Wisconsin’s Republican lawmakers may have made clear that Gov. Tony Evers’ plan to legalize marijuana in the next state budget will go up in smoke, but state Sen. Melissa Agard, D-Madison, isn’t backing down.

Agard has pushed the state for years to legalize the drug for both medicinal and recreation­al purposes, a proposal that garnered little traction under former Gov. Scott Walker and the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e.

Today, though, the dynamic is different. Legalizati­on could generate $166 million in revenue that could help fund rural schools and programs for communitie­s that have been disproport­ionately affected by past marijuana laws, Evers said when he announced the plan.

Wisconsin is one of just 14 states that has not legalized marijuana in some form. Fifteen states have legalized recreation­al marijuana over the past few years, including neighborin­g Illinois and Michigan, and Minnesota lawmakers have introduced a billto do the same.

Public support of the idea is also growing in Wisconsin. A 2019 Marquette University Law School poll found 59% of Wisconsin voters backed legalizati­on for recreation­al purposes, and 83% backed it for medicinal purposes.

Still, Republican leaders of the Legislatur­e’s budget committee wasted little time in shooting down the proposal. Though Sen. Howard Marklein, RSpring Green, said he believed it was “too big” to be inserted into the state budget, Sen Chris Kapenga, R-Delafield, worried about health effects of the drug on kids who choose to use it.

We rated Kapenga’s claim linking youth marijuana use and psychologi­cal disorders True. But Agard jumped in to make another point:

“Youth usage of marijuana has actually gone down in states that have fully legalized,” she tweeted back.

It’s an important claim, because those opposed to legalizati­on often claim that the move will cause a dramatic uptick in teens smoking pot. But is it correct?

Let’s take a look.

Study says legalizati­on may cause a decrease, but results aren’t as definitive as Agard asserts

Along with her statement, Agard tweeted a link to an analysis on marijuana laws and teen use of the drug from JAMA Pediatrics, a peer-reviewed journal published by the American Medical Associatio­n.

The analysis, published July 8, 2019, pooled data from each state’s Youth Risk Behavior Survey from 1993 to 2017 to examine the associatio­n between legalizati­on and teen marijuana use.

Averaging the survey data from seven states that passed recreation­al marijuana laws from 2012 to 2017 — Alaska, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachuse­tts, Nevada and Washington — researcher­s found an 8% decrease in the likelihood of youth marijuana use and a 9% decrease in the likelihood of frequent

marijuana use among youth after such laws were passed.

“We interprete­d our results as consistent with the argument that it is more difficult for teens to obtain marijuana as drug dealers are replaced by licensed dispensari­es that require proof of age,” study author D. Mark Anderson, an associate professor of economics at Montana State University, told PolitiFact Wisconsin in an email.

In some states, recreation­al sales did not begin until a few years after legalizati­on, so the researcher­s repeated their analysis based on those dates and got similar results, Anderson said.

A caveat of the analysis is that it uses an average — and when looking at states’ raw data from the survey, results are more mixed.

For example, in Colorado, there have been no significant changes in current marijuana use among high school students since 2005, according to its Healthy Kids Colorado Survey data. In 2013, a year after the state legalized the drug, 19.7% of high school students had used marijuana in the past 30 days; in 2019, 20.6% had.

Alaska’s state survey also reported no significant changes in current youth marijuana use since the drug was legalized in 2015 and sales began in 2016.

And in Oregon, which legalized in 2014, current marjiuana use fell among eighth graders after recreation­al sales began, but rose among 11th graders, data from the state’s 2017 youth survey found. In the 2019 survey, current marijuana use had risen among eighth graders but fallen among 11th graders.

It’s also important to note that the Youth Risk Behavior Survey is just one type of study. Though one set of Washington

state data, from the Washington Healthy Youth Survey, found that marijuana use in that state did decrease among the state’s eighth and 10th graders after legalizati­on for recreation­al purposes in 2012, other studies cited in the JAMA analysis did not reach the same conclusion.

For instance, a study using data from the Monitoring the Future survey, which assesses drug and alcohol use among youth across the U.S., found a statistica­lly significant increase in marijuana use among 10th graders in Washington after legalizati­on for recreation­al use.

Some say the Monitoring the Future data has too much year-to-year volatility to encapsulat­e marijuana policy changes — but it’s clear more review will be needed to fully understand the effects of recreation­al marijuana laws on youth use.

The full effects of marijuana legalizati­on won’t be seen until a generation after national legalizati­on, which still has not happened yet, Jonathan Caulkins, a public policy professor at Carnegie Mellon University and former co-director of RAND’s Drug Policy Research Center, told PolitiFact Illinois about a similar claim from an Illinois state representa­tive.

Our rating

Agard said youth marijuana use has declined in states that have fully legalized the drug for both medicinal and recreation­al purposes.

The JAMA analysis she cited did bear that out, although it has its caveats — when looking at individual states’ data, some that legalized the drug years ago have not seen any meaningful change in youth use.

Meanwhile, at least one study found the reverse — an increase in use. Experts say it will be many years before what Agard claimed can be said with certainty.

We rate her claim Half True.

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