Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Lawmakers gut proposal to decriminal­ize psychedeli­cs

- By Hannah Wiley

SACRAMENTO — Legislatio­n to decriminal­ize certain psychedeli­c drugs such as “magic mushrooms,” MDMA and LSD was gutted by the California Legislatur­e on Thursday, though the lawmaker who sponsored the bill vowed to reintroduc­e the measure next year.

Senate Bill 519 would have allowed for the possession and personal use of some hallucinog­enic drugs, which advocates said would provide a critical mental health tool to treat addiction, PTSD, anxiety and depression, especially for veterans. State Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) said the bill was an important next step in ending the socalled war on drugs, which has disproport­ionately incarcerat­ed people of color.

The legislatio­n on Thursday passed in the Assembly Appropriat­ions Committee, a gatekeeper panel that sifts through hundreds of bills and decides whether legislatio­n with a fiscal cost to the state will advance to the full Assembly, but was amended to become only a study of the decriminal­ization proposal. The amendment was not debated or discussed, and it took Wiener a day to find out how his bill was changed.

“While I am extremely disappoint­ed by this result, I am looking forward to reintroduc­ing this legislatio­n next year and continuing to make the case that it’s time to end the War on Drugs,” Wiener said in a statement. “Psychedeli­c drugs, which are not addictive, have incredible promise when it comes to mental health and addiction treatment. We are not giving up.”

Wiener plans to withdraw the amended bill from considerat­ion, according to his spokespers­on.

Wiener first introduced the bill in 2021, and the Senate

narrowly approved it last summer. But Wiener lacked the necessary votes in the lower house and delayed another vote on SB 519 until this year in order to buy time to build support for the measure.

The proposal would not have decriminal­ized the sale or sharing of psychedeli­cs with people under 21.

Opponents to the bill, which included law enforcemen­t groups and the California District Attorneys Assn., warned that decriminal­izing psychedeli­cs could lead to dangerous outcomes and argued that the hallucinog­enic effects of LSD have contribute­d to murders. Moderate Democrats in the Legislatur­e often joined Republican­s in voting against the measure.

The use of certain psychedeli­c drugs has been decriminal­ized in Washington, D.C., and Oregon, as well as Santa Cruz and Oakland.

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