Del. David Englin, D-Alexandria, recently proposed legislation which would call for a study to evaluate the revenue impact of regulating and selling marijuana through Virginia’s Alcoholic Beverage Control stores. Seeing as 14 states have decriminalized medicinal marijuana, this is a fairly modest proposal. Englin said his bill merely “asks the question of if we sold marijuana through ABC stores, how much money would we get?” It is easy to imagine the budgetary boon that would come from the state’s profit off the ever-persistent demand for marijuana, but it is also worth thinking about how decriminalizing the drug may benefit the University community, as well.
First, it is worth noting that the vast majority of University students have proven responsible enough with that great intoxicant of choice, alcohol. University student surveys indicate that three-fourths of first-year students either do not drink or drink modestly. While this may violate strict federal regulations, we can see that most first-year students, and presumably the wiser upperclassmen, do not drink enough to seriously harm themselves or others. If there are University regulations against consuming certain goods, the goal of such regulations ought to be minimizing the harm done to the students and their community. Why, then, would the case be so different if these 18-year-old adults were having their friends pick up an eighth-ounce of marijuana instead of handles of vodka at the ABC store?
Here is the problem that lies with the one-quarter of first years who drink excessively. These may be the students who are most likely to be loud and belligerent on the Corner, as well as prone to destroying property. Do we have reason to expect that giving wider legal access to an alternative intoxicant would cause these people to live more dangerously or put themselves and others at greater risk than currently?
I doubt that. Alcohol, after all, is widely known to prompt potentially risky behaviors that marijuana does not. Part of the motivation young people have to drink is to overcome their inhibitions and take risks that they would normally avoid. This results in many situations which students come to regret. Marijuana, on the other hand, is more likely to fuel regrettable snacking decisions than any of the more dire consequences associated with alcohol.
Alcohol, as a legal drug, places a constant pressure on the University’s hospital resources by creating the need for rapid medical responses. As a resident of Brown Residential College — named after the “Brown” of the Brown-Forman Corporation, which makes Jack Daniel’s whiskey — I live at the geographical midpoint between Old Dorms and Rugby Road. The stairs surrounding Brown have proven to be a treacherous part of the first-year students’ stumbling walk home.
All too often an ambulance has had to pull up in the middle of the night to retrieve a student, prostrate on the pavement, who is suffering from alcohol poisoning and possibly even badly injured because of a fall on these stairs. Does this mean we should make drinking alcohol illegal? No, not any more than it means we should criminalize stairs.
Marijuana, of course, has the reputation of restricting its users’ mobility by simply keeping them from wanting to stand up. If the rationale for banning substances is going to be their likelihood to bring harm upon users, then alcohol demands more scrutiny.
This is, of course, neglecting the most vital difference between the two drugs. If one drinks too much alcohol, he or she will die. If one smokes too much marijuana, he or she will most likely fall asleep. We have seen that about a quarter of students are going to be drinking excessively and living recklessly during their first year here. There is a reason why the University’s Substance Abuse Prevention website has a guide for attempting to give lifesaving help to a potentially “violent and uncooperative” drunk, while no similar advice is available, or necessary, for typically placid stoners. And still, Resident Advisors are told to call the police if they have even the slightest suspicion that marijuana is being consumed in their dorms, while cases involving alcohol often receive gentler recourses and greater understanding.
The University has an admirable framework for dealing with issues of alcohol abuse, but incoming first years still have the impression that we live in a den of raging alcohol issues, according to student surveys. The University community has the chance to come out strongly in support of Englin’s legislation, not only to assist the public budget in these times of austerity, but also to emphasize the safety benefits that universities across the state would enjoy if alcohol no longer held the legal monopoly on means of intoxication.
If our administration is skeptical about the idea, then it should follow Englin’s example and perform a study weighing the costs and benefits of a change in marijuana policy.
Leaving its Resident Advisors free to deal with more pressing issues and decreasing the number of ambulance rides and stomach-pumpings at the University Hospital may prove financially beneficial. This is a time to discard old superstitions about drugs and strive for policy grounded in evidence, lest our chances at a safer, more responsible academic community go up in smoke.
Sam Carrigan’s column appears Fridays in The Cavalier Daily. He can be reached at s.carrigan@cavalierdaily.com.
Virginia NORML will continue this conversation on marijuana throughout the state. I encourage anyone who wants to help change our laws, or start a UVA campus chapter, to check us out, as well as our Facebook page (www.facebook.com/vanorml).
College students would gain tremendously from legalization. Most marijuana arrests are of people 18-25. Student aid can be denied for a marijuana offense. It is a safer recreational substance than alcohol and if substituted for booze, could reduce harms significantly.
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UVA has thousands of raging drug addicts as it is, directly supporting mass rape, torture, and murder in Latin America. Good thing that bills like this are hopeless in the General Assembly. We hardly need to be encouraging more of this type of typically selfish ambivalence to the suffering of others around here.
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Right, because the current policy of using paramilitary law enforcement agencies to attack civilian homes over a suspicions about some drug or another is really a great idea, Sean. Our tax dollars are sure being spent well on the helicopter surveillance missions, armored cars, and prisons. Having more prisoners than any country in the entire world, by orders of magnitude, is perfectly fine, and allowing the police to seize property and recycle the proceeds into their own budgets is exactly the sort of thing our democracy was built on.
We have vast areas of land that could be used to grow hemp, right here in Virginia — tons and tons of hemp were grown for the army during WWII. There would be no money flowing to South American gangs and cartels if we simply produced our recreational drugs here in the United States. We already produce and sell vast amounts of two of the most dangerous recreational drugs known to man right here in America: alcohol and tobacco. We could be providing people with safer alternatives, while providing more jobs to farmers and reducing our prison population. Attitudes like yours are holding us back.
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I’m OK with hemp, and people who are old and in pain should grow some behind the garage..
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Writing as a retired detective, Sean et al should keep in mind that every hour we spend chasing the local Willie Nelsons and college students = more young teens raped by pedophiles, because my colleagues are flying around in helicopters.
Keep in mind your tuition is way too expensive, because we have built 2,000,000 prison beds to hold all the Charlie Sheens and their suppliers. And how easily can teens buy illegal drugs? Very!
Sean needs to tell us all the advantages of his Modern Prohibition.
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