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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (May 20, 2016)
DRUGS, from page 5 think about all the other small ways this has played out to create these huge disparities. Once folks are released from prison, if they have a felony conviction on their record, in many states they can’t vote, they can’t access public assistance, so it’s creating an entire caste system, a second class of citizens, that Michelle Alexander rightly framed as being as harmful to the black community as the Jim Crow laws. (Alexander is the author of the 2010 New York Times best-seller, “The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness.”) E.G.: Is Oregon considered a drug-reform leader, or are we lagging behind in some ways? E.F.: We are seen as a trailblazer on marijuana reforms, however as far as the other elements of drug policy reform, we’re not seen as a pioneer, and rightly so. There’s still a lot of room for improvement. One step we could take is defelonizing possession of all drugs. On the same day that we passed Measure 91 here in Oregon, our neighbors to the south, California, passed Proposition 47, which changed most low-level, non-violent offenses, including drug possession, from felonies to misdemeanors, and it was retroactive so it had a huge impact. Just last week, the Maine Legislature passed a bill changing most drug possession charges from felonies to misdemeanors. I think that’s a huge step that the Oregon L eg islatu re could tak e to m ove u s fu rth e r down this road. (In Oregon, it is a felony to possess many controlled substances, including heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine and methadone.) Another piece is Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion, which was pioneered in Seattle a few years back. This is diverting individuals who commit low-level drug offenses to harm reduction-based case management instead of jail, and both Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Albany, New York, are implementing this, and I think that’s a perfect next step for Portland, but it would be phenomenal to see the entire state do it. (Earlier this month it was announced a Page 7 News Street Roots • May 20-26, 2016 drug. We have an obligation - you have an similar program, Homeless Engagement obligation - as someone who is making Alternatives Resources and Treatment, or money in this industry, to help legalize i t ” HEART, is in the works for Multnomah When I was raising money for the County.) marriage equality movement, it reminded The most inspirational example is in New me of the conversations we would have with York, where the mayor of Ithaca released couples who wanted the right to marry, and the Ithaca Plan, which is a radical departure remind them that once they got the right to from the United States’ traditional punitive marry, there was so much more work to be approach to drug policy, and instead focuses done to ensure the on public health, economic development and protection and the equality harm reduction. It is of the LGBT community. I expanding access to "Mach of what has see such similar things in medication-assisted fueled the drug war is this drug reform treatment, increasing stigma and 'othering' of movement, that if someone youth employment programs and opening the people who use drugs. I really cares about one believe the compassion piece of rolling back the nation’s first supervised injection facility. drug war, that we help that would be required If Portland wanted to them connect the dots to to decriminalise drugs become a pioneer and their motivations. would go a long way really take a hard look at Frankly, what happened toward advancing saner in Oregon, the investment health-based approaches drug policies." to some of the struggles those folks made in that our community ELLEN FLENNIKEN changing the laws here, experiences, these are we’re not seeing as much some of the things we in other states. should do. It’s rare, because it is a human rights and social justice issue, that all of a sudden we E.G.: When you were fundraising for are creating the foundation for what is Measure 91, did you get the feeling that a lot of expected to be anywhere from a $20 billion the financial backers and people who were to $40 billion industry in 2020. And I believe invested in the legalization of recreational it’s (the industry’s) obligation to invest in marijuana were interested in that next step of rolling back these laws. If they’re going to decriminalizing other drugs? Or were most benefit from it, they should certainly bear people more interested in being able to smoke the burden of financing it, and I am so their weed? grateful to the generosity of the folks in Oregon that donated, and I know it was E.F.: Most of my conversations with difficult for many of them, who are running d onors to M e asu re 91, th e biggest donors, essentially start-up businesses who weren’t were about these broader criminal justice making too much profit at that point reforms. But as far as having a well-funded We’ve got a few more months before the movement or campaign to decriminalize all election this year when potentially 10 states drugs - no, I don’t know that I see that will be voting on marijuana, both medical happening. and (recreational) adult use, but I have seen That is the interesting thing about raising no other state do as much or be as generous money to legalize adult use of marijuana, from the industry toward legalizing, and it’s particularly from folks who hoped to profit off of legal marijuana, and it’s a conversation disappointing. I have every single time I make an ask of someone who has a marijuana business. “Let’s be clear about what’s happening here: You’re profiting off of marijuana when there are people all over this country who are still being arrested and incarcerated for this E.G.: I f we decriminalize other drugs, won’t more people use them? E.F.: So we have actually found that is not the case. Regulation and decriminalization are two different things. With Measure 91 and with marijuana, it’s very clear that marijuana is a substance that would not cause harm to public health and safety, were it to be legally regulated and sold. As far as decriminalizing possession of all drugs, that’s a different approach entirely. We are advocating that simple possession of a drug should not carry with it such stringent penalties. Criminalizing drugs has obviously not been a deterrent to people using them. What the criminalization of drugs does is, rather than reducing the demand, it creates this system in which the supply must be held in an illicit market. The cartels must secure their product through intimidation and violence. On a more individual level, folks who use drugs, when they’re criminalized, don’t have the resources in many situations to use them safely. And there’s these public health consequences from th a t But you have seen other countries that decriminalize drug use, like Portugal and (other) European countries (where) we have not seen an increase in the use of drugs. Instead we’ve seen positive public health outcomes, reduction of drug-related disease and illness, and reduction of violence. E.G.: How might the decriminalization of drugs change our approach to addiction? E.F.: Much of what has fueled the drug war is stigma and “othering” of people who use drugs. I believe the compassion that would be required to decriminalize drugs would go a long way toward advancing saner d ru g policies. The roots of this failed war on drugs are based in racism and misguided approaches to controlling certain segments of society, and as we take these steps forward, as we challenge society to question the foundations of their ideas around drugs and drug use, I believe the resulting public health and safety benefits will be enormous. There’s just no question that the last few decades of drug policy have been a complete and utter failure, and I believe society is ready to start rolling that back. emily@streetroots. org I Did you serve in the Armedsfiorces and are experiencing or at risk of becoming homeless? t ........................ At Health Share, we believe good health is more than what happens inside your doctor's office. Good health starts in your community and includes staying active, eating healthy food and getting regular check-ups. Share your healthy habits with family and friends. We can all have better health when we share it together. Transition Projects Please call 855.425.5544 or visit 650 NW Irving Street Better health together. www.healthshareoregon.org