The Mercury News

Group wants voters to hop on ‘magic mushroom’ bus

Activists tout potential health benefits of the hallucinog­enic fungi

- By Jesse Kathan Correspond­ent

SANTA CRUZ >> At first glance, it looked like an ordinary gardening workshop. On a table at the front of the room sat soil additives, humidity detectors and an oyster mushroom the size of a grapefruit.

“This is a younger shiitake mycelium,” said instructor Will Goss, passing around a bag of wood chips covered in thin white filaments. He then described how to grow the rootlike mycelium from spores and coax it into producing mushrooms.

All of the people at the workshop were provided with their own grow kits, but they were told they needed to find their own spores.

That’s because they weren’t learning how to grow shiitakes. They were finding out how to cultivate psychedeli­c mushrooms — illegal to possess under state and federal laws.

The workshop at Santa Cruz’s Louden Nelson Community Center was sponsored by Decriminal­ize California, a statewide group of activists like Goss who are not only seeking to raise awareness about the use of psyche

delic mushrooms but also to persuade California voters to support a November ballot measure that would legalize the hallucinog­enic fungi.

Goss, a longtime fungi enthusiast, believes education is the best way to influence public perception­s of the drug and inform people of its potential benefits.

“This is potent medicine we’re talking about,” he said.

Denver last year became the first U.S. city to decriminal­ize the possession and use of psychedeli­c mushrooms. Oakland quickly followed, expanding its resolution to include all hallucinog­enic plants, including ayahuasca and peyote.

And similar campaigns have popped up in dozens of cities across the country — including Santa Cruz, where the City Council in late January voted unanimousl­y to pass a resolution calling on police to not spend city funds to pursue drug charges for the use or possession of all psychedeli­c fungi and plants.

But Goss’ group is aiming much higher. Its initiative would not only legalize the possession and use of hallucinog­enic mushrooms, but also allow commercial sales and distributi­on of the drug across the Golden State.

For its measure to appear on November’s ballot,

the group will need to gather at least 623,212 signatures of registered voters by July 6.

Ryan Munevar, director of the initiative campaign, said nearly 1,000 volunteers are collecting signatures throughout California.

Paid signature gatherers will be deployed later in the campaign if needed, funded in part by David Bronner, cosmic engagement officer of Dr. Bronner’s Magic Soaps.

If the measure qualifies for the ballot, it is expected to be fiercely opposed by law enforcemen­t groups, parent organizati­ons and many of the same groups that fought Propositio­n 64, the 2016 initiative that legalized the possession and sale of recreation­al marijuana.

Used for thousands of years by indigenous groups in North and Central America, psychedeli­c mushrooms were popularize­d in the United States in the late 1950s and early 1960s, when they were commonly called “magic mushrooms” and “shrooms.” But they were banned in 1970 when psilocybin and psilocin, the two main psychoacti­ve compounds, were listed as Schedule 1 drugs under the U.S. Controlled Substances Act.

Hallucinog­enic mushrooms aren’t nearly as popular as marijuana, but advocates of the proposed initiative say they should be decriminal­ized because they’re not addictive, have

few harmful side effects and don’t have the cultural stigma of Schedule 1 drugs such as methamphet­amine.

In addition, scientists who research psychedeli­c drugs are increasing­ly touting the potential therapeuti­c benefits of hallucinog­enic mushrooms.

Psilocybin’s chemical structure is similar to that of serotonin, a chemical that affects stress levels and mood.

While the way psilocybin affects the brain is still being studied, clinical trials at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore suggest that the chemical may be effective against substance abuse, anxiety and depression.

“By opening pathways in the brain,” psilocybin “may allow someone to be in a state of mind where they can learn new behavioral patterns and temporaril­y feel a reset in their thinking,” said Alli Feduccia, a researcher at the Santa Cruz-based Multidisci­plinary Associatio­n of Psychedeli­c Studies.

Feduccia recently cofounded Project New Day, a group that supports research into psychedeli­cs and the creation of psychedeli­c-assisted group therapy for addiction — think Alcoholics Anonymous with hallucinog­enic mushrooms.

“We don’t believe that it’s just the substance itself that can help people overcome addiction or overcome mental health conditions. It’s a combinatio­n of the therapeuti­c

approach and the integratio­n that comes after,” said Feduccia, who holds a doctorate of neuropharm­acology from the University of Texas at Austin. “Having a group of peers to support that process — that’s really where the transforma­tion comes in.”

Law enforcemen­t groups, however, say legalizing the sale of hallucinog­enic plants would have disastrous consequenc­es.

“This is a horrible concept aimed only at increasing crime and despair,” said Ronald Lawrence, president of the California Police

Chiefs Associatio­n. “It only stands to increase drug dependency for individual­s, and it’s an absolutely inhumane way of addressing addiction issues within our state.”

Carlos Plazola, who spearheade­d the Oakland effort to relax the city’s enforcemen­t of mushroom laws, noted that police there were “very supportive” of the local resolution, in large part because the Oakland Police Department had made only a dozen arrests involving hallucinog­enic mushrooms in a recent five-year period.

But Lawrence, the police chief in Citrus Heights in Sacramento County, said he believes decriminal­ization of the drug will increase homelessne­ss, street crime and the illegal drug trade.

“With something of this magnitude, a ballot initiative is not the right way to go,” he said. “At least let it go filter through the legislativ­e process and have the debate occur and have the science come into this. Have the public safety profession­als weigh in and have all the facts presented.”

Although the initiative campaign shows clear parallels to Prop. 64, Munevar said the legal cannabis industry is not a model Decriminal­ize California wants to follow.

The mushroom initiative, for example, stipulates that no excise or sales taxes may be added to psychedeli­c mushrooms — unlike cannabis, which is heavily taxed at both the state and local levels. That, Munevar said, means legal cannabis is far more expensive than it should be, making the drug inaccessib­le to many California­ns.

In the case of mushrooms, he said, the ease of cultivatio­n will ensure that everyone has access to a homegrown product.

“A person can produce psychedeli­c mushrooms for themselves, their significan­t other, their family, their friends and their neighbor lady who they want to get tomatoes from for about 125 bucks a year,” he said.

 ?? PHOTO BY PATRICK TEHAN ?? Will Goss, who is working to decriminal­ize psychedeli­c mushrooms, holds a king oyster mushroom during a workshop.
PHOTO BY PATRICK TEHAN Will Goss, who is working to decriminal­ize psychedeli­c mushrooms, holds a king oyster mushroom during a workshop.

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