Los Angeles Times

Pot’s legal — what happens next?

Unfettered commerce won’t be good for L.A.

- Mark Ridley-Thomas is chairman of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s and represents the 2nd Supervisor­ial District. By Mark Ridley-Thomas

California is only months away from offering thousands of retailers a license to sell recreation­al marijuana to people ages 21 or older. It is the will of the voters, yet I remain concerned about the impact that recreation­al/non-medical cannabis commerce could have on the health and safety of neighborho­ods throughout Los Angeles County. I wonder how this “brave new world” will make circumstan­ces, conditions, even life itself better. Currently, all commercial cannabis is banned in the unincorpor­ated areas of the county, and if it were up to me, I’d keep it that way until I felt confident that safeguards were in place to protect our communitie­s.

As things stand, it is imperative that the Board of Supervisor­s enacts responsibl­e regulation and effective oversight, developed with input from a wide range of stakeholde­rs, to ensure that creating a commercial market for marijuana would not lead to overly negative consequenc­es. We have a responsibi­lity to serve all 10 million residents of the county — not just the voters who said yes to Propositio­n 64 — particular­ly minors who don’t have the right to vote but certainly deserve our protection.

Our track record has been less than stellar in getting a handle on establishm­ents that sell dependence-inducing substances. Liquor stores are a common sight in many parts of the county, and bear at least part of the blame for higher rates of addiction, blight, petty and violent crime and diminished opportunit­ies for residents in the immediate vicinity. Because unfettered cannabis commerce can compound those problems and sabotage economic revitaliza­tion, we should learn from Colorado and Washington, the first states to legalize recreation­al marijuana (in 2012).

According to its Department of Revenue, Colorado raked in almost $200 million in taxes in 2016 as marijuana sales hit $1.3 billion. But its Department of Public Health and Environmen­t reported that 6% of pregnant women used marijuana, potentiall­y endangerin­g their unborn children’s health. At least 16,000 children were at risk of being exposed to secondhand marijuana smoke at home.

Colorado’s Department of Public Health and Environmen­t also found that 1 in 4 adults age 18 to 25 used marijuana in the last month, and 1 in 8 adults used marijuana daily or near daily. It also reported that more than 5% of high school students used marijuana daily or near daily. Weekly cannabis use at such a young age is associated with impaired learning and memory and could lead to psychotic symptoms in adulthood.

In Washington, the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety found that 17% of fatal crashes in 2014 involved drivers who had recently used marijuana, more than double the percentage before legalizati­on.

Though the perils hysterical­ly alleged in “Reefer Madness” have long been debunked, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health has found that early and regular marijuana use is associated with use of other illicit drugs, including cocaine, hallucinog­ens, prescripti­on opioids and heroin.

Moreover, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion has reported that Los Angeles County fatal crashes involving drivers who tested positive for marijuana began to go up after 1996, increased 360% from 2003 to 2004, maintained an upward trajectory until 2008 before decreasing in 2009, and steadily rose again by 60% from 2010 to 2014. The increases coincided with the passage of the Compassion­ate Use Act, which legalized medical marijuana; the initiation of the Medical Marijuana ID Card Program; and the decriminal­ization of possessing 1 ounce or less of marijuana, making it an infraction instead of a misdemeano­r.

Los Angeles County’s Office of Cannabis Management is working closely with the Board of Supervisor­s, various department­s and a broad array of stakeholde­rs to develop comprehens­ive and reasonable ordinances and policies for both medical and recreation­al marijuana. One of the goals is to create an accountabl­e and safe marketplac­e for the responsibl­e use of marijuana rather than revel in overstated economic opportunit­y. Let’s be clear that gangs and cartels operate outside regulation, and dismantlin­g this illegal market operating within saturated communitie­s will be daunting.

Though dispensari­es tend to be concentrat­ed in low-income neighborho­ods of color, less than 1% are owned by people of color, according to the L.A. County Department of Regional Planning. Apparently, racial and economic discrimina­tion does not stop at the doorstep of the cannabis industry.

Propositio­n 64 proponents say it will generate tax revenue, business profit and jobs. They also claim that it would improve criminal justice by putting fewer people — historical­ly people of color — in jail for smoking a joint. However, that remains to be seen as disparate treatment is a defining feature of law enforcemen­t in too many communitie­s in L.A. County.

A call for effective oversight should not be misconstru­ed as an attempt to thwart the will of the people, or to wage a new war on drugs. Instead, as a “card-carrying progressiv­e” I consider it due diligence to ensure that the proliferat­ing sale of marijuana, a mind-altering substance, will not wreak havoc on our neighborho­ods, particular­ly those already beset with many other challenges. We certainly don’t want to make matters worse, and, right now, my concern is that commercial cannabis has the potential to do just that.

 ?? John Locher Associated Press ?? LOS ANGELES COUNTY is only months away from offering licenses to retailers to sell recreation­al marijuana to adults ages 21 or older.
John Locher Associated Press LOS ANGELES COUNTY is only months away from offering licenses to retailers to sell recreation­al marijuana to adults ages 21 or older.

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