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First Comprehensive Study about CO Legalization Released

Posted on 8/25/14 at 10:08 pm
Posted by CherryGarciaMan
Sugar Magnolia
Member since Aug 2012
2497 posts
Posted on 8/25/14 at 10:08 pm
LINK

A couple of points (this study is huge though):

quote:

Section 1 – Impaired Driving:
• Traffic fatalities involving operators testing positive for marijuana have
increased 100 percent from 2007 to 2012.
• The majority of driving-under-the-influence-of-drugs arrests involve marijuana
and 25 to 40 percent were marijuana alone.
• Toxicology reports with positive marijuana results for driving under the
influence have increased 16 percent from 2011 to 2013.



quote:

Section 2 – Youth Marijuana Use:
• In 2012, 10.47 percent of youth ages 12 to 17 were considered current marijuana
users compared to 7.55 percent nationally. Colorado, ranked 4th in the nation,
was 39 percent higher than the national average.
• Drug-related suspensions/expulsions increased 32 percent from school years
2008/2009 through 2012/2013. The vast majority were for marijuana violations.
Section 3 – Adult Marijuana Use:
• In 2012, 26.81 percent of college age students (ages 18 – 25 years) were
considered current marijuana users compared to 18.89 percent nationally.
Colorado, ranked 3rd in the nation, was 42 percent higher than the national
average.
• In 2012, 7.63 percent of adults ages 26 and over were considered current
marijuana users compared to 5.05 percent nationally. Colorado, ranked 7th in the
nation, was 51 percent higher than the national average.
• In 2013, 48.4 percent of Denver adult arrestees tested positive for marijuana
which is a 16 percent increase from 2008.
Section 4 – Emergency Room Marijuana Admissions:
• From 2011 through 2013, there was a 57 percent increase in marijuana-related
emergency room visits.
• Hospitalizations related to marijuana have increased 82 percent from 2008 to
2013.
• In 2012, the City of Denver rate for marijuana-related emergency visits was 45
percent higher than the rate in Colorado




quote:

Section 8 – Diversion by Parcel:
• U.S. Mail parcel interceptions, with Colorado marijuana destined for 33 other
states, increased 1,280 percent from 2010 to 2013.
• U.S. Mail pounds of Colorado marijuana seized, destined for 33 other states,
increased 762 percent from 2010 to 2013.
Section 9 – THC Extraction Labs:
• In 2013, there were 12 THC extraction lab explosions and in the first half of 2014
the amount more than doubled.
• In 2013, there were 18 injuries from THC extraction labs and in the first half of
2014 there were 27 injuries.
Section 10 – Related Data:
• Overall, crime in Denver increased 6.7 percent from the first six months of 2013
to the first six months of 2014.
• The number of pets poisoned from ingesting marijuana has increased four-fold
in the past six years.
• Colorado estimates for annual revenue from the sale of recreational marijuana
varies from $65 million (.6 percent of all expected general fund revenue) to $118
million (1.2 percent of all expected general fund revenue)
• The majority of counties and cities in Colorado have banned recreational
marijuana businesses
• THC potency has risen from an average of 3.96 percent in 1995 to an average of
12.33 percent in 2013





Some pretty telling stats, but it seems people in CO love pot, and that the state has not gone to pot in the coming months since the inception of legalization.

There are negatives associated with any policy, but this study does not talk about the money saved from nonincarceration efforts and policing efforts, which would affect the budgetary issue. Also, the THC potency increase is

Posted by Iosh
Bureau of Interstellar Immigration
Member since Dec 2012
18941 posts
Posted on 8/25/14 at 11:21 pm to
quote:

The High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area program (HIDTA) is a drug-prohibition enforcement program run by the United States Office of National Drug Control Policy.
I would only note that these figures are coming from an entity that is forbidden by law from producing anything that might paint legalization in a positive light. LINK

EDIT: This is some knee-slappingly hilarious stuff. In the span of a few pages, they knit together that awful Northwestern brain voxel study (complete with fraudulent scare quote), Maureen Dowd's bad trip, and some 2012 predictions about youth marijuana use that have already been disproven. Followed by a whole chapter on "marijuana-related" ER admissions, which is a statistical favorite among the prohibitionist set because all it means is that someone admitted for any reason (say, for a broken bone or a URI) either tested positive for weed or admitted to being a user to their doctor. DEMON. WEED.
This post was edited on 8/25/14 at 11:32 pm
Posted by Asgard Device
The Daedalus
Member since Apr 2011
11562 posts
Posted on 8/25/14 at 11:31 pm to
quote:

Traffic fatalities involving operators testing positive for marijuana have
increased 100 percent from 2007 to 2012.


WTF? Pot wasn't legalized for recreational use until December 2012.

Posted by Jimbeaux28
Baton Rouge
Member since Jun 2007
4051 posts
Posted on 8/25/14 at 11:38 pm to
I believe all of these studies are dealing with way too small a sample size to truly measure the impact of legalization of pot in Colorado.

Let's see what the impact is in 5 years - good or bad.
Posted by northshorebamaman
Cochise County AZ
Member since Jul 2009
35528 posts
Posted on 8/26/14 at 12:00 am to
I'm doing a comprehensive study about WA legalization right now. Results are mostly positive but I'm listening to an alarming amount of Peter Tosh.
Posted by Galactic Inquisitor
An Incredibly Distant Star
Member since Dec 2013
15292 posts
Posted on 8/26/14 at 12:08 am to
quote:

• Traffic fatalities involving operators testing positive for marijuana have
increased 100 percent from 2007 to 2012.


From 2 to 4?
Posted by mmcgrath
Indianapolis
Member since Feb 2010
35474 posts
Posted on 8/26/14 at 12:54 am to
Most of the "testing positive for marijuana" increases can likely be explained by an increase in testing for marijuana. Also the overall implications of the report saying that a few thousand medical marijuana users would affect anything is pretty ridiculous. There is no data for the post legalization time frames.
Posted by AUbused
Member since Dec 2013
7771 posts
Posted on 8/26/14 at 7:49 am to
Something strikes me as VERY fishy with these statistics. The years chosen for one thing. Since when do they run toxicology reports on all arrestee's? Did they institute some sort of new policy after the law passed?'

Another thing that kept striking me as funny was that, even with pot being legal, there were still several states that surpassed them in general population use. What states were those I wonder?
Posted by KeyserSoze999
Member since Dec 2009
10608 posts
Posted on 8/26/14 at 8:02 am to
Personally I think the crack down on drivers with certain THC levels is a sham, just a way for the government to come in on the heals of legalization and make more money. When I use to drink, I drove drunk many times. I think God I didn't injure anyone and know for a fact its stupid. I drove high for almost 4 years straight, after I quit drinking, and there's simply no comparison, in no way did it impair my driving. Now that I'm straight I probably drive more reckless than when I was high. I know its anecdotal, but the government should be ashamed for lumping 'high drivers' in the same category as 'drunk drivers'. That is all.
Posted by Paluka
One State Over
Member since Dec 2010
10763 posts
Posted on 8/26/14 at 9:43 am to
Groovy man....
Posted by SpidermanTUba
my house
Member since May 2004
36128 posts
Posted on 8/26/14 at 3:25 pm to
quote:


• Traffic fatalities involving operators testing positive for marijuana have
increased 100 percent from 2007 to 2012.


That's a pretty useless statistic considering you can test positive for marijuana weeks after use.

I would guess that the number of murderers testing positive for marijuana is also up.


I would also guess that the number of mimes testing positive for marijuana is also up.


I would also guess that the number of people with blonde hair testing positive for marijuana is also up.


I would also guess that the number of people who own bicycles testing positive for marijuana is also up.



See? All it really means is more people are smoking dope recreationally.

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