USA TODAY US Edition

States lead the way with marijuana legalizati­on

- Steve Hawkins Steve Hawkins is executive director of the Marijuana Policy Project.

Last week, Gallup reported that a record-high 66 percent of Americans now say marijuana should be legal. The reason is simple: Marijuana never should have been illegal in the first place.

Through decades of reefer madness, Americans were led to believe that marijuana is far more harmful than it actually is. This is not to say it’s harmless. But it is safe to say it is less harmful than alcohol, another substance that once was illegal and is now widely accepted in our country.

Neverthele­ss, our federal government and many states still have laws on the books that criminaliz­e marijuana use, and they are all too frequently enforced. U.S. law enforcemen­t agencies made about 600,000 arrests for marijuana possession last year, according to the FBI. To make matters worse, these marijuana laws have long been disproport­ionately enforced against communitie­s of color.

We learned as a nation during alcohol prohibitio­n that simply banning a widely demanded substance does not make the substance go away. Instead, prohibitio­n creates a criminal market to satisfy that demand, which brings with it a whole host of public health and safety problems.

As a result, several states have decided to take a new approach and start regulating marijuana similarly to alcohol. It is being produced and sold by licensed businesses that must follow rules regarding testing, packaging and labeling. Retailers must check IDs, and government officials have reported no uptick in teen use rates.

At the same time, these states have generated hundreds of millions of dollars in tax revenue, and law enforcemen­t officials appear to be improving their clearance rates for other crimes.

Marijuana legalizati­on is not a panacea, but it is progress, just as ending Prohibitio­n was 85 years ago. States led the way in developing alternativ­e policies that control alcohol while allowing for responsibl­e adult use, and they should continue to do the same with marijuana.

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