Panels cover wide spectrum of policy approaches
Drug Policy Alliance director Ethan Nadelmann welcomed nearly 1000
participants to Long Beach in November for three days of intensive
panel discussions, workshops and informal networking among drug policy
reform at the biennial DPA conference.
The 2005 International Drug Policy Reform Conference
lived up to its theme of “building a movement.” This was the largest such gathering on record, and by a show of hands, nearly half those present had never before attended one. Common Sense for Drug Policy had provided scholarships to many who would otherwise have been unable to
attend the historic gathering. With over 200 presenters in the lineup,
panels were led not only by academic experts, but by people directly
affected by the policies being discussed. Speakers included formerly
incarcerated people, drug users, youth, parents and more.
 The biennial Drug Policy Alliance conference, held Nov. 9-12, 2005 in Long Beach, drew participants from many nations and all areas of drug policy reform.
Half the crowd had never before attended a drug reform conference.
 Assemblyman Mark Leno Among the elected officials who attended were CA
Assemblyman Mark Leno, who announced his new bill AB 1147 during a
panel on industrial hemp, and Mayor Rocky Anderson of Salt Lake City.
Students for Sensible Drug Policy was well represented, as were NORML,
MPP, Americans for Safe Access, needle exchangers, harm reductionists,
and scores of other community action groups.
Human Rights and the Drug War marked its tenth
anniversary with a display showing convicted drug offenders, their
sentences and their families along with updates on where they are now
(see hr95.org for more). Several former POWs were at the conference in
person working the crowd to support various reform projects. Many POWs
from the original exhibit are still in prison, some served their full
sentences and some got early releases, but depressingly few of the
nation’s cruel and unusual criminalization policies have changed in a
decade. Tragically, some policies are even worse than in 1994.
Law enforcement now engaged
One noteworthy improvement has been the rise of
Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, a group founded by former
undercover narcotics officers such as LEAP director Jack Cole, who
received an award from DPA for his work. Seattle’s former police chief
and recently avowed drug legalizer Norm Stamper introduced Cole, who
spoke of his own epiphany and regrets, and humbly acknowledged all his
colleagues in LEAP, noting that law enforcement is actually another
victim of the drug war by driving a wedge between it and the community
and making it hard to convince idealistic young people to become police
officers and district attorneys. The corruption and abuses fostered by
drug prohibition make it hard to keep quality personnel and to keep
them from becoming corrupted or disillusioned.
 With a focus on movement building, one panel featured activists who had helped pass local cannabis reform measures including (below) Dale Gieringer (CA), Mason Tvert (CO), Mikki Norris (CA) and Dominic Holden (WA). Dan Viets (MO) is not shown. Photoes by Chris Conrad
The conference featured an unusually tight schedule
that often had nine panels speaking simultaneously on needle exchange,
harm reduction, medical marijuana, local voter initiatives,
international issues, race, public records, community organizing, the
Internet, news media or one of dozens of other topics. This gave many
people, who otherwise would have been excluded in the interest of time,
an opportunity to present their work and share experiences and for
others to sit in on discussions they rarely hear.
A multi-denominational religious service brought
together a cross-section of activists to speak and meditate on the
moral implications of the Drug War and to commemorate the passage of
reformers and victims of the Drug War. The DPA (drugpolicy.org) was
formed when two major reform groups, Drug Policy Foundation and the
Lindesmith Center, merged. Among this year’s awards:
Corrals receive research award
Californians Valerie and Michael Corral won The
Norman E. Zinberg Award for Achievement in the Field of Medicine. This
award recognizes medical and treatment experts who perform rigorous
scientific research and who have the courage to report their findings
that may be at odds with current dogma. Valerie began using cannabis as
replacement for a rigorous pharmaceutical regimen following an auto
accident in 1973 that caused a brain trauma and resulted in epilepsy.
The Corrals were arrested in 1992 for cultivating
five plants. Spurred by the arrest, they became involved in the
campaign to legalize medical marijuana and were first in the state to
win on a necessity defense. Both have served as expert witnesses in
court, they head up WAMM, co-developed the Santa Cruz County Medical
Marijuana ID Card Program, and Valerie testified to the Senate Health
Committee.
MAP activists honored
DrugSense and its Media Awareness Project (MAP) took
the Robert C. Randall Award for Achievement in the Field of Citizen
Action, which honors citizens who make democracy work in the difficult
area of drug law and policy reform.
DrugSense and MAP comprise a nationwide network of
volunteer activists dedicated to disseminating honest and accurate
information on all aspects of drug policy to the media, policy makers,
and the general public. DrugSense.org is devoted to informing the
public of rational alternatives to the drug war, and helping organize
citizens to bring about reforms. Matt Elrod and Mark Greer accepted the
award. They have helped generate over 20,635 published letters to the
editor, the development of an online archive of over 163,000 drug
policy news and opinion pieces, and the creation of numerous
internet-based drug policy reform discussion groups.
Mayor Ross C. “Rocky” Anderson of Salt Lake City,
UT, received The Richard J. Dennis Drugpeace Award for Outstanding
Achievement in the Field of Drug Policy Reform, an award given to
individuals who most epitomize ‘loyal opposition’ to drug war
extremism. Anderson is the most outspoken and effective elected local
official in the US in terms of drug policy reform. Within months of
taking office in 2000, he eliminated the costly, ineffective and
misleading DARE program as “an absolute fraud on the people of this
country.” Since then he has continued to innovate: police in Salt Lake
City now receive harm reduction trainings. In partnership with numerous
drug policy reform groups, Anderson recently hosted the first
comprehensive conference on harm reduction and methamphetamine.
For more information on the DPA and its activities
and online photos from the conference, visit www.drugpolicy.org.
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