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News Release |
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August 19, 1999
Household Survey Indicates Slight Decline In Marijuana Use
Aug. 19,
1999, Washington, DC: Teenage marijuana use dropped slightly last year
according to the 1998 National Household Survey on Drug Abuse.
The annual survey conducted by the
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMSHA), a division
of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, estimates 8.3 percent of
youths age 12-17 currently use marijuana, a 1.1 percent decline from 1997.
The percentage of 12-17 year-olds who smoked marijuana within the last 12 months
dropped from 15.8 percent in 1997 to 14.1 percent in 1998.
A third of all people questioned
reported they have smoked marijuana at least once in their life.
The percentage of the population (12
years and older) who smoked marijuana in 1998 showed a slight drop from 9
percent in 1997 to 8.6 percent. Current use (defined as having smoked
within the last month) dropped by a tenth of a percentage point to 5
percent. The only age group to show an increase in marijuana use was the
18-25 years old group whose percentage rose from 22.3 percent to 24.1
percent. Marijuana use fell from 11.2 percent to 9.7 percent in the 26-34
years old group, and from 4.4 percent to 4.1 percent in the 35 years and older
group.
"The numbers in this survey
indicate there is no adolescent marijuana crisis," said Allen St. Pierre,
NORML Foundation Executive Director. "Despite exaggerated warnings
from the drug czar and others, marijuana use rates in this country remain
constant."
For more information, please
contact Allen St. Pierre of NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751. The survey
can be viewed at http://www.samhsa.gov/.
NORML Foundation Launches Marijuana Ad Campaign In San Francisco
Aug. 19,
1999, San Francisco, CA: A public advertising campaign launched in San
Francisco by the NORML Foundation urges that the government "stop arresting
responsible pot smokers."
The campaign is intended to encourage
marijuana smokers to become more involved in the public debate over marijuana
policy.
The 30 billboards located on San
Francisco bus shelters bear one of two headlines: "Honk, if you
Inhale," and "A Pot Smoker is Busted Every 45 Seconds -- and You
Wonder Why We're Paranoid." The ads direct readers to the NORML
Foundation's toll free number and to its web site (www.norml.org).
"Around 12 million adult
Americans smoke pot regularly in their homes and still hold down demanding jobs,
raise families and lead productive lives," said Keith Stroup, NORML
Executive Director. "We're calling on those individuals to send a
message to the state and federal governments -- responsible marijuana use by
adults is commonplace, safe and should be decriminalized."
For more information, please
contact Keith Stroup of NORML @ (202) 483-5500. The ads can be viewed at http://www.norml.org/about/ads.shtml.
CA Legislator To Introduce Industrial Hemp Resolution
Aug. 19,
1999, Sacramento, CA: Assemblywoman Virginia Strom-Martin (D-Duncan
Mills) is urging California authorities to consider legalizing the domestic
cultivation of industrial hemp.
Strom-Martin said last Friday that
she plans on introducing a pro-hemp resolution in the legislature, following the
lead of North Dakota, where industrial hemp cultivation was already made
legal. Hawaii and Minnesota have approved the growing of test crops.
Sixteen other states are also considering such measures.
The resolution calls for the
legislature to "consider directing the University of California, the
California State University, and other state agencies to prepare studies in
conjunction with private industry on the cultivation, processing, and marketing
of industrial hemp."
"Industrial hemp could be of
immense benefit to both the economy and the environment of the North Coast and
rural California in general," Strom-Martin said. "I'm proud to
be the one taking the initiative in the legislature to finally get the state to
deal rationally rather than hysterically with a crop whose promise is great and
whose time has come."
For more information, please
contact Stacey Sullivan of Strom-Martin's office @ (916) 319-3798 or Scott
Colvin of NORML @ (202) 483-5500.
ACLU Sues OK School District Over Student Drug Testing
Aug. 19,
1999, Oklahoma City, OK: The American Civil Liberties Union has filed
a complaint against a rural Oklahoma school district that administers drug tests
to all students who wish to participate in extracurricular activities.
Other school districts have employed
mandatory drug-testing, but many of the activities in the Tecumseh School
District are tied to the student's classes. Students who refuse to submit
to the urine test for the activity would then be forced to drop the associated
class, thus losing credits for graduation.
The ACLU contends this is a violation
of a student's right to a public education, as well as the Fourth Amendment
protection against unreasonable search and seizure.
"First, schools wanted to test
student athletes, then it was students in extracurricular activities, and now
it's students competing in quiz bowls and performing in chorus, where does it
end?" said Graham Boyd, Director of the ACLU's Drug Policy Litigation
Project. "The district's drug testing policy is more about symbolism
than substance.
Tecumseh officials initiated urine
testing without any evidence of a drug problem at the school and at a time when
government reports show that teen drug use is on the decline nationally."
For more information, please
contact Graham Boyd, Director of the ACLU Drug Policy Litigation Project @ (203)
787-4188. The ACLU's complaint is available at: http://www.aclu.org/court/tecumseh.html.
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