burnin1
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From merryjane.com
Americas Oldest Senator Makes Final Hour Plea Against Cannabis Legalization in California
We dont need more stoned drivers on roads warn Sen. Feinstein and top state sheriff in op-ed.
Written on November 04, 2016 by Bill Kilby
With less than a week to go until Californians vote on Proposition 64 the states ballot initiative to legalize recreational cannabis some of the measures long-standing opponents are making one last attempt to convince the public that the plan is half-baked. The states senior senator Dianne Feinstein ( who is in fact the eldest currently serving member of the U.S. Senate) and the president of the states Sheriffs Association Donny Youngblood co-authored a fervent editorial published across several California newspapers yesterday, wherein they disagree with the legalization initiative primarily on the alleged likelihood that it would add up to deadly consequences on the road, citing that fatal marijuana-related accidents doubled in Washington and Colorado after they legalized recreational marijuana.
After relating the sad story of Ryan Cupples, a 24-year-old Californian killed in a car accident whose mother has since become a public opponent of Prop. 64, the authors argue that the examples of marijuanas increased prevalence among drivers in fatal crashes in Colorado and Washington, as well as the lack of tests or standards to measure driver impairment while high, mean that the measures passage and implementation will pose a public safety risk to our state [and] will inevitably result in an uptick in traffic fatalities . They also profess that the troubling data on car accidents spurred the American Automobile Association (AAA) to officially oppose legalization in California.
Getting specific, they write, In Washington, the percentage of drivers in fatal car accidents who had recently used marijuana doubled in the year following legalization, increasing from 8 percent to 17 percent. In Colorado, 10 percent of fatal car accidents were marijuana-related before legalization that figure subsequently increased to 21 percent. Although the authors dont explicitly cite them in their essay, the two data sets they reference were published by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, the national associations research arm which released the statistics for Washington State last May, and the Rocky Mountain High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (RMHIDTA), a federal drug prohibition enforcement program which reported the figures for Colorado in September. However a closer look at these reports makes the self-confident predictions of Feinstein and Youngblood appear more questionable.
AAA itself admitted in the very same May report that Researchers examined the lab results of drivers arrested for impaired driving, and the results suggest that legal limits for marijuana and driving are problematic because [there] is no science showing that drivers reliably become impaired at a specific level of marijuana in the blood. They added that this conclusion distinguishes the influence of cannabis from alcohol-induced impairment, and that marijuana can affect people differently, making it challenging to develop consistent and fair guidelines. Their admission that there is currently no scientific evidence of a direct relationship between marijuana use and psychomotor impairment puts a big bold asterisk on the claim of growing marijuana-related auto fatalities in Washington and elsewhere. (Its also notable that it wasnt technically the national foundation which objected to Prop. 64, but the Automobile Club of Southern California, AAAs regional chapter).
As journalist Radley Balko wrote in 2014 about a similar Colorado traffic study: references to marijuana-related accidents in studies [could] refer to any measure or trace of the drug. So when officials and legalization opponents talk about increases in these figures, it still isnt clear what any of this means for road safety. As for increases in the presence of pot among drivers in fatal accidents, Balko astutely reasoned that It makes sense that loosening restrictions on pot would result in a higher percentage of drivers involved in fatal traffic accidents having smoked the drug at some point over the past few days or weeks. Youd also expect to find that a higher percentage of churchgoers, good Samaritans and soup kitchen volunteers would have pot in their system. Youd expect a similar result among any large sampling of people. This doesnt necessarily mean that marijuana caused or was even a contributing factor to accidents, traffic violations or fatalities.
Recent criticism of RMHIDTAs reports of legal marijuanas impacts in Colorado makes the significance of their figures similarly dubious. As Jacob Sullum writes of their latest release, RMHIDTAs habit of inviting inferences in headlines while warning readers not to draw them in footnotes reaches ridiculous extremes, adding a line graph on page 17 shows a sharp increase in traffic deaths related to marijuana, while a footnote warns That does not necessarily prove that marijuana was the cause of the incident.
Putting the superficially alarming figures highlighted by Feinstein and Youngblood in the wider context of our current lack of conclusive knowledge about the influence of cannabis on driving ability reveals their logic for opposing Proposition 64 to be far more shaky than their earnestly dire predictions insist. Regardless it is appearing increasingly less likely that public opinion on the measure can be swayed even by the most urgent op-ed in the home stretch of this campaign; an LA Times poll released Tuesday indicates that 58 percent of voters support Prop. 64, with 74 percent of voters aged 18 to 29 endorsing the proposal.
https://www.merryjane.com/news/amer...a-against-cannabis-legalization-in-california
Americas Oldest Senator Makes Final Hour Plea Against Cannabis Legalization in California
We dont need more stoned drivers on roads warn Sen. Feinstein and top state sheriff in op-ed.
Written on November 04, 2016 by Bill Kilby
With less than a week to go until Californians vote on Proposition 64 the states ballot initiative to legalize recreational cannabis some of the measures long-standing opponents are making one last attempt to convince the public that the plan is half-baked. The states senior senator Dianne Feinstein ( who is in fact the eldest currently serving member of the U.S. Senate) and the president of the states Sheriffs Association Donny Youngblood co-authored a fervent editorial published across several California newspapers yesterday, wherein they disagree with the legalization initiative primarily on the alleged likelihood that it would add up to deadly consequences on the road, citing that fatal marijuana-related accidents doubled in Washington and Colorado after they legalized recreational marijuana.
After relating the sad story of Ryan Cupples, a 24-year-old Californian killed in a car accident whose mother has since become a public opponent of Prop. 64, the authors argue that the examples of marijuanas increased prevalence among drivers in fatal crashes in Colorado and Washington, as well as the lack of tests or standards to measure driver impairment while high, mean that the measures passage and implementation will pose a public safety risk to our state [and] will inevitably result in an uptick in traffic fatalities . They also profess that the troubling data on car accidents spurred the American Automobile Association (AAA) to officially oppose legalization in California.
Getting specific, they write, In Washington, the percentage of drivers in fatal car accidents who had recently used marijuana doubled in the year following legalization, increasing from 8 percent to 17 percent. In Colorado, 10 percent of fatal car accidents were marijuana-related before legalization that figure subsequently increased to 21 percent. Although the authors dont explicitly cite them in their essay, the two data sets they reference were published by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, the national associations research arm which released the statistics for Washington State last May, and the Rocky Mountain High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (RMHIDTA), a federal drug prohibition enforcement program which reported the figures for Colorado in September. However a closer look at these reports makes the self-confident predictions of Feinstein and Youngblood appear more questionable.
AAA itself admitted in the very same May report that Researchers examined the lab results of drivers arrested for impaired driving, and the results suggest that legal limits for marijuana and driving are problematic because [there] is no science showing that drivers reliably become impaired at a specific level of marijuana in the blood. They added that this conclusion distinguishes the influence of cannabis from alcohol-induced impairment, and that marijuana can affect people differently, making it challenging to develop consistent and fair guidelines. Their admission that there is currently no scientific evidence of a direct relationship between marijuana use and psychomotor impairment puts a big bold asterisk on the claim of growing marijuana-related auto fatalities in Washington and elsewhere. (Its also notable that it wasnt technically the national foundation which objected to Prop. 64, but the Automobile Club of Southern California, AAAs regional chapter).
As journalist Radley Balko wrote in 2014 about a similar Colorado traffic study: references to marijuana-related accidents in studies [could] refer to any measure or trace of the drug. So when officials and legalization opponents talk about increases in these figures, it still isnt clear what any of this means for road safety. As for increases in the presence of pot among drivers in fatal accidents, Balko astutely reasoned that It makes sense that loosening restrictions on pot would result in a higher percentage of drivers involved in fatal traffic accidents having smoked the drug at some point over the past few days or weeks. Youd also expect to find that a higher percentage of churchgoers, good Samaritans and soup kitchen volunteers would have pot in their system. Youd expect a similar result among any large sampling of people. This doesnt necessarily mean that marijuana caused or was even a contributing factor to accidents, traffic violations or fatalities.
Recent criticism of RMHIDTAs reports of legal marijuanas impacts in Colorado makes the significance of their figures similarly dubious. As Jacob Sullum writes of their latest release, RMHIDTAs habit of inviting inferences in headlines while warning readers not to draw them in footnotes reaches ridiculous extremes, adding a line graph on page 17 shows a sharp increase in traffic deaths related to marijuana, while a footnote warns That does not necessarily prove that marijuana was the cause of the incident.
Putting the superficially alarming figures highlighted by Feinstein and Youngblood in the wider context of our current lack of conclusive knowledge about the influence of cannabis on driving ability reveals their logic for opposing Proposition 64 to be far more shaky than their earnestly dire predictions insist. Regardless it is appearing increasingly less likely that public opinion on the measure can be swayed even by the most urgent op-ed in the home stretch of this campaign; an LA Times poll released Tuesday indicates that 58 percent of voters support Prop. 64, with 74 percent of voters aged 18 to 29 endorsing the proposal.
https://www.merryjane.com/news/amer...a-against-cannabis-legalization-in-california