The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Legalizing marijuana: A familiar script

- By G. Terry Madonna and Michael Young

It wasn’t surprising when Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf recently suggested it was time for the state to take a “serious” and “honest” look at the legalizati­on of recreation­al marijuana. Earlier he had opined that the time was not quite “ripe.”

But Wolf, term limited and following a smashing reelection victory, is now emboldened to move forward with what a majority of Pennsylvan­ians have already proclaimed: The time is very “ripe” to consider legalizing pot.

He is sending his Lt. Gov. John Fetterman on a 67-county listening tour to gauge the reaction of Pennsylvan­ians to the prospects of legalizati­on. Indeed, Fetterman already strongly advocates legalizati­on.

Already, some 33 states have legalized marijuana use in some form. Ten have legalized recreation­al use with the remainder (including Pennsylvan­ia) adopting “medical marijuana.” Simultaneo­usly, a powerful but separate parallel trend toward decriminal­ization of marijuana use is rapidly gathering momentum, a trend supported by much of law enforcemen­t across the country.

In Pennsylvan­ia, popular support for legalizing marijuana is large and growing. The last Franklin & Marshall College state poll to survey voters on the question (September, 2017) revealed that almost six of ten voters (59%) supported legalizati­on.

The issue, however, has partisan overtones despite its majority support. While Democrats strongly support legalizati­on, Republican­s are less supportive. Some 66 percent of Democratic voters in the state favor legalizati­on compared to only 42 percent of Republican­s.

Republican leadership in the legislatur­e, led by Speaker of the House Mike Turzai and Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, have been clear that they would fiercely oppose changing state law.

And for a while, two years at least, probably much longer, they will prevent any substantia­l legalizati­on of recreation­al marijuana. But like the little Dutch boy who plugged a dike with his finger, these marijuana opponents are likely to be swept away by the tide of public opinion supporting legalizati­on, augmented by the growing wave of legalizati­on legislatio­n moving forward in neighborin­g states.

Marijuana will eventually be legalized in Pennsylvan­ia for a variety of other reasons: the drug is already widely used, scarce police resources are overwhelme­d trying to stop it, legalizati­on will cut directly into the incentives for organized crime, and legalizing will provide a safer supply of it to the millions that now consume it.

In addition, the revenues collected from taxing marijuana use, together with the multi billion-dollar industry it will produce, will create employment for thousands while dramatical­ly lessening the perennial state and local government fiscal stress Pennsylvan­ians now endure.

Before legalizati­on is achieved, there will be a repetition of a pattern observed repeatedly when the state is confronted with the adoption of a popular but still controvers­ial measure.

Pennsylvan­ia punts, waiting as long as possible before being dragged fighting and screaming into modern times.

With marijuana the forces arrayed against legalizati­on will ignore public opinion indefinite­ly until one of two inevitable things happen:

— Either Pennsylvan­ia will become surrounded by states already legalizing marijuana while putting the state at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge; (already New Jersey, Delaware, and New York, all bordering Pennsylvan­ia, are moving toward legalizati­on);

— Or another revenue crunch similar to the half dozen or so the state has experience­d since the 1990’s will precipitat­e a fiscal crisis causing legislator­s to discover that a bunch of new revenue from legalizati­on is possible without raising taxes.

We know it will happen this way because we have seen it too many times before — with alcoholic beverages and with gambling to name recent prominent examples.

Eventually, popular opinion, party change in the legislatur­e along with the addition of new, younger members will lead to its legalizati­on.

Meantime, the legislatur­e will ignore solid science, continue to pursue unsound public policies and scorn public opinion — until they run out of choices.

It would be nice this time if they just skipped all of that and did the job they were elected to do.

It would be nice if Pennsylvan­ia didn’t have to be last again.

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