| CSU,
CU activists seek pot o'plenty
Say
alcohol is greater danger
By
mwhaley@denverpost.com Monte Whaley
Denver Post Staff Writer - Saturday,
March 26, 2005
http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1413,36~53~2783098,00.html
Fort
Collins - Students at two Colorado college campuses rocked
by alcohol-related deaths last year are pressing school officials
to lighten up on marijuana users.
Claiming pot
is safer than alcohol, activists at the University of Colorado
and Colorado State University want sanctions for the use and possession
of marijuana to be no greater than those imposed for underage
drinking.
Students signed
petitions last week to have the measure put on the ballot next
month during student elections. The initiative also asks administrators
to conduct a study to determine the impact of making marijuana
use nonpunishable for students older than 18.
The vote will
be nonbinding at CU and CSU. But if the measures pass, they will
send a message that students think a few puffs from a joint are
a lot safer than several shots of beer, said Mason Tvert, executive
director for SAFER (Safer Alternatives for Enjoyable Recreation).
"If a
fraternity told a freshman to go into the woods and smoke a pound
of pot, he is not going to die from that," said Tvert, a
recent University of Virginia graduate. "He'll fall asleep
before that happens."
The Boulder-based
SAFER was formed in January as a nonprofit and is looking to create
chapters at CU and CSU. The group is heading up the petition drive
to get the marijuana measure before student voters.
Proponents
got the 1,200 signatures needed at CU and are hoping to get the
required 2,085 at CSU by Monday, Tvert said.
He claims
too much of police officers' time and money is spent on marijuana
enforcement, while it is alcohol that claims lives. At least 1,400
college student deaths each year are linked to alcohol, according
to the National Institutes of Health.
But, Tvert
said, there has never been a reported case of a student dying
from a marijuana overdose.
"Our
stance is that alcohol is more acceptable in our society and that
is just bad public policy," he said.
Marijuana
is an illegal substance and can draw fines and jail time. Students
caught with pot can be suspended from school.
Both CU and
CSU had a student die last year from alcohol poisoning. Their
deaths led to several changes aimed at curtailing alcohol abuse
on both campuses and to proposals in the state legislature to
tighten penalties for underage drinking.
"Tons
of kids are dying every year from alcohol, and we just think there
is an alternative to that," said Havi Nelson, a CSU junior
and a leader in the petition drive.
Several CSU
students signed the petition Friday afternoon, including seniors
Joe Stiles, 22, and Russ Owen, 23.
"Both
alcohol and marijuana are drugs, but you get busted for one and
you get in a lot less trouble for the other," Owen said.
"It doesn't make any sense."
Others, however,
are skeptical that marijuana is not as dangerous as alcohol.
"It's
certainly not harmless," said Anne Hudgens, CSU's executive
director for campus life.
Students who
use marijuana consistently have a harder time in classes, their
grades fall and their relationships plummet, Hudgens said.
In all, she
said, "I don't think we are interested in our school experimenting
with making marijuana use nonpunishable."
Staff writer
Monte Whaley can be reached at 303-726-8674 or mwhaley@denverpost.com
.
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