Marijuana legalization initiatives prompt NFIA to launch 'But What About the Children?' campaign

Whether or not Californians approve Proposition 19 on November 2, the proposition is the first of many to legalize marijuana for recreational use and turn it into an unregulated commercial enterprise.

The marijuana legalization initiatives prompted National Families in Action to launch But What About the Children? - a campaign delineating provisions that must be included in any law that legalizes marijuana. The mission of But What About the Children? is to hold a legalized marijuana industry accountable for ensuring that children will not have access to the drug. The campaign suggests that any marijuana legalization law should incorporate what medical science has learned about alcohol and tobacco use to prevent marijuana use and addiction among children.

If Prop 19 fails, proponents are planning similar 2012 ballot initiatives in California and other Western states. Rep. Barney Frank has introduced the first federal legalization bill (HR 2943) in Congress. Rep. Frank's bill is two sentences long, and contains no provisions for how legal marijuana will be regulated, taxed or sold. No pediatric, medical, prevention, treatment, or policy experts have participated in crafting proposed legalization laws.  

National Families in Action (NFIA) is a nonprofit organization that has worked for 33 years to help parents keep their children healthy and drug-free. The organization is opposed to legalization of marijuana. However, its leaders recognize that if Americans vote to legalize the drug, the country needs clear thinking about long-term implications of legalizing marijuana and the regulatory mechanisms needed to protect children.  

"Citizens are voting on laws that don't define crucial questions, such as how taxes on legal marijuana will be used," said Sue Rusche, president and CEO of National Families in Action. "Will marijuana be advertised and promoted, and if so, how do we keep children from becoming a target audience of a legalized marijuana industry? How do we protect children from secondhand marijuana smoke? How do we protect them from traffic accidents caused by impaired drivers? How do we identify marijuana-impaired drivers?"

To develop But What About the Children?, NFIA brought together some of the world's most learned, experienced and thoughtful experts on alcohol, tobacco and drugs.

NFIA posed the following question to the experts:  "Knowing the impact alcohol and tobacco have had on public health, and if you could have written the tobacco control bill 150 years ago or the 1933 law repealing Prohibition, what provisions to protect children would you have included?" 

The discussions led to 12 provisions that must be in any law that legalizes marijuana.  They include:

  • A fund to be financed by the marijuana industry so that taxpayers won't have to foot the bill for the damage marijuana will do. 

The fund also will support research to track children's use; determine short-term and long-term health consequences of marijuana use on children; learn how second-hand marijuana smoke affects them; determine if use is a gateway to other harmful drugs; determine effects of use on driving; and many other problems marijuana will pose for children. 

The fund will pay for prevention efforts and treatment for those who become addicted. 

  • A penalty fee for every underage user and, if that fails, automatic repeal of legalization if underage use exceeds certain levels. 

"Legalization is being driven by the fortunes to be made from legalized marijuana, and no one is thinking about the health and safety of children," said William Carter, chairman of the board of National Families in Action. "Whether it's tobacco, alcohol or marijuana, the industries know the science:  the younger children are when they start using the substance, the more likely they'll become addicted - and lifetime customers." 

If marijuana is legalized, But What About the Children? is designed to keep American children from becoming deadly statistics of the future. Tobacco killed 100 million people worldwide in the 20th century and kills more than 400,000 Americans every year. It took 150 years before Congress passed the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Law of 2009, which, among other safeguards, places tobacco under the control of the FDA.   Alcohol abuse kills 85,000 Americans each year. Merely to maintain sales at current levels, both the tobacco and alcohol industries must add new customers to replace those who die from using their products. But What About the Children? aims to make sure that children don't become those new customers.

Alcohol use by California's children today may predict their marijuana use tomorrow if the state legalizes marijuana. The latest California Healthy Kids Survey reports that almost four times more California seventh graders (31 percent) started drinking alcohol than started using marijuana (8 percent) by age 14. Six times more seventh graders (13 percent) started drinking alcohol in childhood - aged 10 or younger - as compared to marijuana initiators (2 percent). If marijuana is legalized, similar results can be expected in children.

"We allowed alcohol and tobacco to be sold for too many years without effective regulation, and we've paid a terrible price in terms of early use, addiction, and all of those deaths," said Rusche. "If policy makers decide to legalize a third addictive drug, it's imperative that we use our 150 years of knowledge and experience to protect our children from becoming the target market of the marijuana industry."

Comments

  1. Doug Snead Doug Snead United States says:

    re: "National Families in Action (NFIA) is a nonprofit organization that has worked for 33 years to help parents keep their children healthy and drug-free."

    You must mean, "National Families in Action (NFIA) is a nonprofit organization that has worked for 33 years to 'help' parents by jailing them for pot.  Marijuana is our focus. We say we save the kids; but we really just jail adults for pot. It's all about jailing adults for pot, though, we don't like to put it that way."

    What? No mention of jail or prison?  No one never, ever goes to jail for pot, you say? Oh sure - ok then, what's the problem with not jailing adults for pot - if we never jail adults for pot? Prohibitionists want it both ways? I see.

    Prohibitionists see arrest, jails and prisons as tools to force and coerce us - to make us (adults, grandparents) not take cannabis.

    (It is not working - we get plenty of pot despite the laws.)

  2. cactus cowboy cactus cowboy United States says:

    God when are you people going to start educating yourself about cannabis. Its embarrassing reading this article. How can you sleep at night knowing you are conveying  bald face lies to other people. Be a man DARE to tell the truth about cannabis. I lost 3 friends this week because I stood up for MJ... unbelievable they look at me now with shock. lol I am tired of standing aside. Viva proposition 19!!!!

  3. Christian Christian United States says:

    Jesus said, Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them. (Matthew 7:12).  

    I know I would not want my child sent to jail with the sexual predators, or my aging parents to have their house confiscated and sold by the police, over a little marijuana.  

    We can change the world when we vote.

  4. travis powell travis powell United States says:

    Everything that you said in this article is crap. Do you really think marijuana is bad for you? it's a proven fact that marijuana is better for you than alcohal or tobacco so if that is allowed then why cant marijuana be legal. you write this article as if you know how marijuana affects you... do you really know how it affects you, not in the way your explaining it you dont. if people smoke and drive at the same time thats thier choise if they get caught give them a ticket just like we do with alcohal that is already legal and being miss used clearly. people are dying because of alcohal or ciggeretes but have you heard anything in the history of all marijuana use that anyone has ever died because of it. some experts are even saying it may even be cancer proventing. now even if that was true by even 1% would you agree that it has been helping people for years now. so just legalize it why waste tax payers money on a natural plant that helps people, its not hurting anything. dont diss it till you try it

  5. bob dobbolina bob dobbolina United States says:

    A 12 yo can go to a 7-11, and buy a COCAINE derivative preparation,(ORA-GEL), meant for use by INFANTS for teething pain.
    A dying CANCER patient has to live in constant fear of MIDNIGHT RAIDS, HARRASSMENT and ARREST, for their 'LEGAL' use of MEDICAL CANNABIS.

    So what about the 'children'?
    Right now, there is NO requirment for the sellers of pot to check ID's.   A child has easier access to pot, and other illegal drugs, than to booze and cigs!   If you want to keep pot out of kids hands, then LEGALIZE IT, REGULATE IT, PROFIT FROM IT!
    YES on 19!

  6. michael tucker michael tucker United States says:

    Scientists did a test on a monkey where they pumped 150 joints in 5 min. using a mask, the monkey died. They ran a catscan and saw tht the monkey lost major brain cells. So they came out to the public and said that weed kills brain cells. It's proven that smoking weed can stimulate brain cells if you strive to learn. For example my grades have always been D's and F's, I started getting high everyday at lunch and my grades went up to B's and C's. I know it's not a big difference but I passed all my classes when I might have failed them and I can remember what was taught to me when before I would be told something, go home and not remember what was said.

    Has no one watched that movie The Union? go look it up on google. it's an hour and some minutes so if you have time everyone should watch it at least once.

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical.
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