Up in smoke


Los Angeles Times: Marijuana advocates are cheering the Assembly’s Public Safety Committee for voting out a measure designed to legalize, tax and regulate the sale of the drug to adults 21 and over. The bill is being marketed as a revenue raiser; the Board of Equalization estimates that the state could reap up to $1.3 billion in sorely needed tax revenue, and proponents have skillfully wielded the budget crisis to boost support for the measure.

Public support

Polls show that 56 percent of Californians back legalizing marijuana. Across the country, the numbers are somewhat lower, but nevertheless momentum is building for a reconsideration of marijuana laws covering both medicinal and recreational use. Many states now treat marijuana offenses as mere infractions, not subject to jail time. The American Medical Association recently reversed its long-held position and urged more research into the drug’s properties.

AB 390, sponsored by Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, D-San Francisco, would not be an appropriate first step for California.