USA TODAY US Edition

Oakland looks to decriminal­ize magic mushrooms after Denver

- Marco della Cava

SAN FRANCISCO – First came Denver. And now possibly Oakland, California, will help set the stage for other cities to consider decriminal­izing hallucinog­enic fungi, or “magic mushrooms.”

Tuesday, Oakland’s City Council will vote on whether to direct law enforcemen­t to stop investigat­ing and prosecutin­g individual­s for using or possessing drugs sourced from plants, cacti and – most commonly – mushrooms that contain the hallucinog­en psilocybin.

Denver’s historic move last month was the result of a narrowly won popular vote. Oakland is the first city to address the issue through its City Council. The city’s public safety commission advanced the resolution to the council last week.

“If this passes, it could really start something nationwide because it would show that if you have a progressiv­e city council, things can change quickly,” says Carlos Plazola, director of Decriminal­ize Nature Oakland, one of the main organizati­ons pushing the initiative.

Advocates such as Plazola say such natural drugs have been used by various cultures for hundreds of years for everything from spiritual quests to helping battle psychiatri­c imbalances such as post-traumatic stress syndrome. They say legalizing mushrooms would free law enforcemen­t to tackle higher-priority issues.

“We have many mental challenges on our streets today, and it’s important to be able to freely provide whatever medicinal support we can, including the use of plants that have beneficial effects for thousands of years,” says Oakland City Council member Noel Gallo, who presented the resolution.

“This move is backed by the people, by doctors, scientists and neighbors who all came to me asking for the police department to change their focus,” he says. “Having another city go before us was a good reference point. But we’re going to look toward making this an initiative on the California ballot in 2020.”

Other states eyeing ‘shrooms’

California and Colorado are hardly alone. In Oregon, there’s a push underway to put the decriminal­ization of mushrooms on that state’s 2020 ballot, while in Iowa, Republican state Rep. Jeff Shipley pushes a mushroom bill in the state’s Legislatur­e.

Denver activist Kevin Matthews, whose Decriminal­ize Denver organizati­on helped tip the scales in favor of destigmati­zing mushrooms in the Mile High City, says other cities will follow suit “because we have simply jumpstarte­d the conversati­on.”

Oakland police officials did not respond to a request for comment on the mushroom issue.

Oakland council member Loren Taylor says police will “follow the guidance of the council.”

Taylor has some reservatio­ns about the proposal; he abstained from voting on the matter when it was in front of the public safety committee.

“In the black community and others, we have fallen prey to drug use in a way that’s been problemati­c,” Taylor says. “I know these natural plants have some positive benefits, but I also know that releasing things without solid policies and operating models can have an adverse effect on our communitie­s.”

Like Denver’s new mushroom law, Oakland’s proposal has narrow guidelines. It does not allow – in contrast to guidelines governing legal marijuana – for the sale or distributi­on of natural hallucinog­enic drugs.

Instead, the resolution recommends an education campaign designed to inform the public on the possible benefits of moderate psilocybin use.

Gateway to a ‘trip’

Since 1970, psilocybin has been classified as a so-called Schedule 1 controlled substance, along with marijuana. Schedule 1 drugs carry with them a high probabilit­y of addiction and abuse and include hard-core substances such as cocaine, heroin and lysergic acid diethylami­de, or LSD.

In the ’60s, the height of psychologi­st and author Timothy Leary’s “Turn on, tune in, drop out” movement, a young generation fueled by psychedeli­c bands ranging from the Grateful Dead to the post mop-top Beatles experiment­ed with hallucinog­ens, particular­ly the chemically manufactur­ed variant of magic mushrooms, LSD.

Though so-called acid trips were said to expand the mind, they could also lead to frightenin­g experience­s. From 1953 to 1973, the CIA conducted secret LSD experiment­s – often on unwitting test subjects – through a program known as MK-Ultra that was designed to study the mind-control possibilit­ies of the drug.

The natural variety of psilocybin, typically found in certain types of mushrooms, has been used by Native American tribes and other indigenous peoples for centuries, often to help clear the mind of negative thoughts.

Last year, researcher­s at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore published a study in the medical journal Neuropharm­acology advising that psilocybin be reclassifi­ed from a Schedule 1 drug with no known benefits to a Schedule 4 drug, which would put it in the same category as prescripti­on sleeping pills.

“There’s a reason this movement is growing,” Plazola says. “This is about drugs that should never have been criminaliz­ed in the first place.”

“This move is backed by the people, by doctors, scientists and neighbors ... asking for the police department to change their focus.”

Noel Gallo Oakland City Council

 ?? RICHARD VOGEL/AP ?? A vendor bags psilocybin mushrooms at a pop-up cannabis market in Los Angeles last month.
RICHARD VOGEL/AP A vendor bags psilocybin mushrooms at a pop-up cannabis market in Los Angeles last month.

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