The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Doctor challenges state legislator­s’ support for recreation­al marijuana

- By Christine Stuart ctnewsjunk­ie.com

HARTFORD >> Supporters of legalizing marijuana were put on the defensive Wednesday by almost two hours of testimony offered by Dr. Deepak Cyril D’Souza, a professor of psychiatry at Yale University School of Medicine and director of neuropsych­iatry at the VA Connecticu­t Healthcare System.

D’Souza told the legislatur­e’s Judiciary Committee that marijuana is addictive and research has shown that about 10 percent of people who try marijuana will become addicted.

He said it’s not as addictive as opioids or cocaine, but it is addictive and there are withdrawal symptoms.

He said there’s an increase in the demand for treatment of marijuana addiction as more people become addicted to cannabis, but “there’s nothing for us to offer them,” in the form of treatment. D’Souza said unlike with opioids or cocaine there’s no proven way to treat someone for an addiction to marijuana.

D’Souza said over the past 20 years he’s been studying this issue and doing research, “I don’t see any people performing better under the influence of cannabis.”

He said researcher­s have found that the “more marijuana you smoke the greater your likelihood of a number of cognitive deficits.” And exposure in adolescenc­e was related to “significan­t reduction in IQ,” D’Souza said.

A long-term study found that those cognitive deficits persisted, D’Souza added.

But for proponents of the legislatio­n, which is one of four bills this year calling for legalizati­on, cannabis provides a safer alternativ­e to opioids and many maintained it’s a less harmful drug than alcohol. For other supporters it’s about addressing the impact that marijuana prohibitio­n has had on society, specifical­ly minority population­s, and raising revenue for the state.

“Marijuana prohibitio­n has lasted 80 years,” Senate President Martin Looney, D-New Haven, said in written testimony. “Yet, it has been just as much of a failure as America’s shortlived experiment with alcohol prohibitio­n. It is time we take the same rational, common-sense approach to marijuana, as we did with alcohol: regulating and taxing it.”

The bill proposed by Looney proposes a structure for taxation of marijuana and marijuana products inspired by the approach Colorado has taken. Looney’s legislatio­n would impose a special 23.65 percent sales tax on all marijuana and marijuana products at retail. The special sales tax would be in addition to the regular 6.35 percent sales tax and would amount to a combined effective sales tax of 30 percent.

Maine and Massachuse­tts voters approved ballot initiative­s this past November and are expected to open up stores next year. Rhode Island, Vermont, and New Jersey legislatur­es are all considerin­g enacting similar measures, Looney said.

A March 11, 2015 poll by Quinnipiac University found that 63 percent of Connecticu­t voters support the legalizati­on of marijuana.

Looney citing a report by the Cato Institute, a free market think-tank, said the group’s 2016 report found “state marijuana legalizati­ons have had minimal effect on marijuana use and related outcomes.”

The report also found that available data from Colorado and Alaska on marijuana use from the Youth Risk Behavior Survey showed no obvious effect of legalizati­on on youth marijuana use.

Rep. Toni Walker, D-New Haven, said when minority kids do normal adolescent things like experiment­ing with drugs that sometimes the circumstan­ces lead to incarcerat­ion.

“By making it a criminal offense it pushes more kids into a system that will not allow them to have another chance,” Walker said.

Connecticu­t decriminal­ized possession of less than a half ounce of marijuana in 2011.

“We are not incarcerat­ing individual­s who are using marijuana for personal use,” Rep. Rosa Rebimbas, R-Naugatuck, said. “It’s still illegal to deal in marijuana.”

Walker said kids in her community are in prison because of this and “this is the number one issue they’re having.”

She said when she looks at the juvenile justice system the kids look more like her and there is a “definite disproport­ionate contact,” with her community, which is why she’s in favor of legalizati­on.

But that doesn’t mean she condones the use of marijuana.

“I think we need to spend more time educating our children about the harmful uses of all of these things,” Walker said. This story has been modified from its original version. To view the original, visit ctnewsjunk­ie.com.

 ?? CHRISTINE STUART — CTNEWSJUNK­IE ?? Dr. Deepak Cyril D’Souza testifies. He was introduced by Dr. William A. Petit, who is a state representa­tive from Plainville.
CHRISTINE STUART — CTNEWSJUNK­IE Dr. Deepak Cyril D’Souza testifies. He was introduced by Dr. William A. Petit, who is a state representa­tive from Plainville.

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