CHANGING MINDS, LAWS & LIVES CAMPAIGN

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Higher Education Act Reform Campaign

Since 1998 DRCNet has campaigned for repeal of the drug provision of the Higher Education Act (also known as the "Aid Elimination Penalty,") a 1998 law that delays or denies federal financial aid to people convicted of state or federal drug offenses -- since taking effect in the fall of 2000, nearly 200,000 students have been denied aid under this law. The major component of this effort has been our coordination of the Coalition for Higher Education Act Reform (CHEAR), a coalition including some of the nation's leading religious, criminal justice, drug treatment, education, civil rights and health organizations which seeks to repeal the drug provision. Ten members of Congress spoke at our May 2002 press conference, a record in drug policy reform.

The campaign scored a major victory in February 2006, when the drug provision was scaled back to apply only to people whose drug offenses were committed while they were in school and receiving federal aid.

Also in February, DRCNet issued our first major report, published under the auspices of CHEAR, "Falling Through the Cracks: Loss of State-Based Financial Aid Eligibility for Students Affected by the Federal Higher Education Act Drug Provision," finding that a majority of states deny state financial aid to applicants because of drug convictions, even though few of them have laws on the books directing them to do so. Del. Ana Sol Gutierrez of Maryland offered legislation in the state's 2006 session to address that situation, and efforts underway in states around the country to take on the issue at that level.

Speakers appearing in this photo include Rep. Bobby Rush (at the podium), with Rep. Tammy Baldwin, Rep. Elijah Cummings, Rep. Robert Andrews, drug provision victim Caton Volk, Jo'ie Taylor of the United States Student Association, Students for Sensible Drug Policy national director Shawn Heller and Legal Action Center representative Jennifer Collier.

International Harm Reduction Association Conference

2010/04/25 - 9:00am
2010/04/29 - 7:00pm

These conferences have been held around the world for two decades and, for 2010, we are returning to the city which hosted the first conference in 1990 – Liverpool, England.

ACC Liverpool -- BT Convention Centre
Monarchs Quay
Liverpool, L3 4FP
United Kingdom
Drug War Issues Harm Reduction
Politics & Advocacy Organizations

Training: Treating Substance Using Patients in Your Practice - An Introduction to Harm Reduction Psychotherapy

2009/12/11 - 9:30am
2009/12/11 - 4:30pm

This workshop will introduce Tatarsky’s Integrative Harm Reduction Psychotherapy a new approach to effective treatment of substance using patients.

Albert Ellis Institute
45 East 65th Street
New York, NY, 10065
United States
See map: Google Maps
Drug War Issues Harm Reduction
Politics & Advocacy Organizations

Training: Treating Drug and Alcohol Users in Your Practice

2009/11/21 - 10:00am
2009/11/21 - 4:00pm

Treating Drug and Alcohol Users in Your Practice: Rationale, Theory and Technique of Integrative Harm Reduction Psychotherapy

The Training Institute for Mental Health
115 West 27th Street
New York, NY, 10001-6217
United States
See map: Google Maps
Drug War Issues Harm Reduction
Politics & Advocacy Organizations

Electrifying

Reform Conference 2009

 

Dear friends,

Hear what DPA Executive Director Ethan Nadelmann had to say about the Reform Conference.

Ethan 2009 Conference Video

Watch the video

Electrifying.

That’s how it felt last week in Albuquerque to gather with more than 1,000 activists working for drug policy reform.

Even if you couldn’t make it to the Reform Conference yourself, you can check out the major plenary speeches, candlelight vigil, and our Twitter feed – you can start by hearing how energized I was on the last day of the conference.

You won’t believe how fired up former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson was at the closing plenary.  You’ll be moved by the speakers at our candlelight vigil in honor of drug war victims.  And you can get a sense of what it was like to be there on the ground from the loyal reformers who Tweeted from the conference.

Last week in Albuquerque I saw a movement inspired, reenergized, and eager to meet the challenges and successes of the road ahead.

I hope you will keep this feeling with you in the months to come, and mark your calendars for the next Reform Conference – November 2-5, 2011 at the Westin Bonaventure hotel in Los Angeles, California.

Thank you, now and in the future, for all that you do.

Sincerely,

 

 

Ethan Nadelmann
Executive Director
Drug Policy Alliance

P.S. Don’t forget to check out the videos from this year’s conference!

      and

     Reform Conference Co-Hosts
Reform Conference 2009 Email Stationery Footer

Feature: Fired Up in Albuquerque -- The 2009 International Drug Policy Reform Conference

Jazzed by the sense that the tide is finally turning their way, more than a thousand people interested in changing drug policies flooded into Albuquerque, New Mexico, last weekend for the

Marijuana Policy Project’s 15th Anniversary Gala to Celebrate ‘15 States in 15 Years’

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                                                                                   

NOVEMBER 19, 2009

Marijuana Policy Project’s 15th Anniversary Gala to Celebrate ‘15 States in 15 Years’

Celebrity guests and other prominent figures will help celebrate MPP’s remarkable passage of improved marijuana laws in 15 states in 15 years

CONTACT: Mike Meno, MPP assistant director of communications …… 202-905-2030 or mmeno@mpp.org

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Marijuana Policy Project, America’s largest marijuana policy reform organization, will look back on 15 productive years of improving marijuana laws at a January 13 gala that will feature guest speakers such as talk show host Montel Williams. The star-studded host committee includes Melissa Etheridge, Tom Robbins, Bill Maher, Ben Taylor, Steve Buscemi, Susan Sarandon, Lewis Black, Nicole Atkins, Margaret Cho, Mark Leno, Hal Sparks, Ani DiFranco, Garry Trudeau, and Medeski, Martin and Wood, along with many other prominent supporters.     

         When MPP was founded in 1995, medical marijuana was illegal in all 50 states.  Since then, 13 states have passed medical marijuana laws, with Michigan becoming the 13th state in November 2008, when Michigan voters passed MPP's ballot initiative by a 63% to 37% margin.  By the end of 2010, MPP is hopeful that medical marijuana will be legal in 15 states (with passage in New York and New Jersey).

         At the same time, marijuana possession is now decriminalized in 13 states, with Massachusetts becoming the 13th state in November 2008, when Massachusetts voters passed MPP's ballot initiative by a 65% to 35% margin.  In 2010, MPP is hopeful that marijuana will be decriminalized in 15 states (with Rhode Island and Vermont becoming the 14th and 15th states).

         WHAT: The Marijuana Policy Project’s 15th Anniversary Celebration

         WHEN: January 13, 2010. Press Availability from 6:00 to 6:30 p.m.

                        Reception from 6:30 – 7:30 p.m. Dinner from 7:30 to 11:00 p.m.

         WHERE: Hyatt Regency Washington on Capitol Hill, 400 New Jersey Avenue, NW, 20001

         Tickets cost $250 each, or $2,000 for a table.

         With more than 29,000 members and 100,000 e-mail subscribers nationwide, the Marijuana Policy Project is the largest marijuana policy reform organization in the United States. MPP believes that the best way to minimize the harm associated with marijuana is to regulate marijuana in a manner similar to alcohol. For more information, please visit http://MarijuanaPolicy.org.

####

Press Release: California Budget Deficit Balloons, While Prisons on Schedule to Overspend by $1.4 Billion

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: November 18, 2009
CONTACT: Margaret Dooley-Sammuli at (213) 291-4190 or Stephen Gutwillig at (323) 542-6510

California Budget Deficit Balloons, While Prisons on Schedule to Overspend by $1.4 Billion

Advocates Condemn Sacramento’s Priorities: “California’s Incarceration Spending Locks Up Our Tax Dollars”

SACRAMENTO – The nonpartisan Legislative Analyst’s Office announced today that it expects the California state budget deficit to exceed $20 billion by the end of the 2010-11 fiscal year, and that the state will spend $1.4 billion more on prisons than was budgeted in 2009-10. Advocates criticize the state for failing to make real cuts to prison spending, while enacting brutal cuts to important social services.

“California’s prison spending is totally out of whack and it’s locking up tax dollars that now aren’t available for education and other community services like fire protection and elder care,” said Margaret Dooley-Sammuli, deputy state director for the Drug Policy Alliance in Southern California. “Other states, like New York, have reduced their crime rates and their prison populations at the same time. California should follow their lead.”

The Legislature and governor approved $1.2 billion in unallocated cuts to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) in late July. On September 11, the Legislature sent a bill to the governor that would realize just $200-300 million in cuts. According to the LAO’s report, prison spending will exceed its 2009-10 budgeted level by $1.4 billion.

“Sacramento said that it would cut prison spending by $1.2 billion – but that was a lie. That should come as no surprise; the prisons have overspent their budget by hundreds of millions of dollars in each of the past several years,” Dooley-Sammuli continued. “With the state near fiscal collapse, this just won’t do any longer. Prisons, like other resources, should be used wisely. They simply aren’t the right place for people convicted of petty offenses, particularly low-level, non-violent drug law violations.”

According to the CDCR, over 30,000 people are locked up in California state prisons for a non-violent drug offense – at a total cost of $1.5 billion per year. Instead of reducing costs by addressing the number of people incarcerated for petty drug offenses, however, the state recently announced that it would cut by 70% the amount of drug treatment offered behind bars and by 40% the amount of drug treatment offered on parole.

The LAO report is online at: http://www.lao.ca.gov/laoapp/PubDetails.aspx?id=2143

# # #

Nice People Take Drugs

In June we highlighted a bus advertising campaign, "Nice People Take Drugs," conducted by the British drug reform advocacy group Release. Some of the nice people from Release attended the big drug policy conference in Albuquerque last week, and they were nice enough to give us one of their new "Nice People Take Drugs" decks of playing cards, featuring politicians from the US, UK and elsewhere and the quotes they've given about their past drug use. (Whether all of the featured politicians are nice people is a subjective question, of course.) The front of the cards feature the organization's web site and a toll-free helpline, hard to see in the picture (0845 4500 215 if you're in Britain and need the help).

Albuquerque's "British Invasion" also featured the Transform Drug Policy Foundation's new publication, After the War on Drugs: Blueprint for Regulation. Check Drug War Chronicle later this week for a conference report highlighting this and more.

Here's a sampling of the Release cards:

Last but not least, for now, a picture I snapped during the conference's closing plenary, former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson delivering the keynote:

Medical Marijuana: American Medical Association Calls for Review of Pot's Schedule I Status

In an historic shift, the country's largest physician group, the American Medical Association (AMA), has reversed its long-held position that marijuana has no medical value.

Feature: 2009 International Drug Policy Reform Conferences Opens Amid Optimism in Albuquerque

Hundreds, possibly more than a thousand, people poured into the Convention Center in downtown Albuquerque, New Mexico, as the Drug Policy Alliance's

The 2009 International Drug Policy Reform Conference

2009/11/12 - 8:30am
2009/11/14 - 10:00pm

The International Drug Policy Reform Conference is a biennial event that brings together people from around the world who believe that the war on drugs is doing more harm than good.

Albuquerque Convention Center
401 2nd Street NW
Albuquerque, NM, 87102
United States
See map: Google Maps
Politics & Advocacy Organizations

Moving Marijuana Reform Forward in Colorado

2009/11/16 - 6:00pm

Please join Sensible Colorado, SAFER, and the Marijuana Policy Project for a Thanksgiving Celebration to commemorate how far marijuana policy reform has come in Colorado, and to find out where it is h

Gilmore Art Center @ Mile High Framing
2119 Curtis Street
Denver, CO, 80205
United States
See map: Google Maps
Drug War Issues Marijuana Policy
Politics & Advocacy Organizations

You're invited: Celebrate 15 years of MPP history with us

Dear friends:

Please join MPP staff, supporters, and celebrity guests in toasting 15 years of remarkable progress in the movement toward ending marijuana prohibition. Reserve your ticket to our 15th Anniversary Gala today.

WHAT: MPP’s 15th Anniversary Gala

WHEN/WHERE: January 13 in Washington, D.C.

HOW: Find more information here.

The event’s theme? 15 states in 15 years. When MPP was founded in 1995, medical marijuana was illegal in all 50 states. Since then, 13 states have legalized medical marijuana and 13 have decriminalized marijuana possession. By the end of MPP’s 15th year in 2010, we’re hopeful that medical marijuana will be legal in 15 states, and that marijuana possession will be decriminalized in 15 states.

Our honorary host committee for the event includes Melissa Etheridge, Susan Sarandon, Montel Williams, Ani DiFranco, Bill Maher, Steve Buscemi, Tom Robbins, and more.

Still not sure? Watch this video invitation, created by honorary host Hal Sparks:

Please reverse your tickets today! 

By the way, if you’d like to join the host committee for the event, please e-mail MPP’s Leah Harris at lharris@mpp.org for more information.

I look forward to seeing you on January 13.

Sincerely,

Rob Signature

Rob Kampia
Executive Director
Marijuana Policy Project
Washington, D.C.

P.S. As I’ve mentioned in previous alerts, a major philanthropist has committed to match the first $2.35 million that MPP can raise from the rest of the planet in 2009. This means that your donation today will be doubled.

Great, FREE event and reason to celebrate

Sensible News header

Sensible Colorado - working for an effective drug policy

 

Make your town a Sensible town!

Help Colorado Lead the Nation

 

 

11/16 Event:  Moving Marijuana Reform Forward in Colorado

 

Please join Sensible Colorado, SAFER, and the Marijuana Policy Project on Monday, Nov. 16th, for a Thanksgiving Celebration to commemorate how far marijuana policy reform has come in Colorado, and to find out where it is headed as we move forward into the new year.

This event is FREE and open to the public!

Our featured guest speaker will be Rob Kampia, executive director of the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP), a leading marijuana policy reform organization based in Washington, DC. Rob will discuss the direction medical marijuana and broader marijuana policy reform efforts are headed at the national level.

Mason Tvert of SAFER and Brian Vicente of Sensible Colorado will also be on hand to discuss recent success in Breckenridge and other efforts forthcoming in Colorado and beyond.

This free event will be held at the Gilmore Art Center, an art gallery in the Mile High Framing building at 2119 Curtis St. in Denver. Light food and drinks will be served, and recommended attire is casual to business-casual.

 

When:       Nov 16, 2009
Time:         6:00 PM
Location:   Gilmore Art Center @ Mile High Framing (2119 Curtis St., Denver, 80205.)  Map HERE

 

 

Although this event is FREE, we hope you will consider bringing your checkbook and making an end-of-the-year donation. All proceeds will benefit Sensible Colorado's and SAFER's work to defend the progress that's already been made in Colorado and take reform in this state to the next level.

Sensible Colorado | PO Box 18768 | Denver CO 80218

Congress Poised to Enact Major Scaling Back of College Aid/Drug Conviction Law

Long-time StoptheDrugWar supporters know that since 1999 we have campaigned for repeal of a law that delays or denies financial aid for college to students because of drug convictions. In part because of our efforts, the law was scaled back in 2006 -- by the Republican-controlled Congress, to be limited to drug offenses committed while one is in college and receiving federal aid.

Earlier this year, the House Education and Labor Committee included language in its student loan package that would restrict the law further to just apply to drug sales convictions. The law's original author, arch-drug warrior Mark Souder, tried to have the language stripped from the bill on the House floor earlier this fall, but withdrew the amendment, admitting that it was likely to fail. That means the good language has passed the House of Representatives -- which means it will be taken up in conference committee whether the Senate passes similar language or not.

There was some talk of it getting changed to apply just to felonies, instead of applying just to drug sales, as a compromise. But either way it will help a lot of people. Our long-term strategy of mobilizing large numbers of mainstream organizations is paying off -- we are winning. Stay tuned.

StoptheDrugWar.org is the #1 source for the latest news, information and activism promoting sensible drug law reform and an end to prohibition worldwide.

Congress Moving on Important Issues

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From crack cocaine sentencing, to needle exchange, to restoring college aid to drug offenders, to studying how to revamp the criminal justice system, Congress is moving on a range of important reforms that have mostly been bottled up before. The Obama administration has also moved things forward with regard to medical marijuana policy. This page will be updated very shortly, but in the meantime visit our archive page for reporting on Congress to get up to speed on what's happening.

StoptheDrugWar.org is the #1 source for the latest news, information and activism promoting sensible drug law reform and an end to prohibition worldwide.

John Stossel, Andrew Sullivan Cite StoptheDrugWar.org

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Over the summer we mentioned that ABC newsman John Stossel had cited Drug War Chronicle in highlighting the injustice of the Will Foster medical marijuana case.

Media find us fairly often, but last week we had two hits that we're particularly happy about -- both on The Daily Dish, one of the top-read blogs in the country, published by Atlantic editor Andrew Sullivan. The first was a "Map of the Day" post illustrating the absurdity of a provision currently appearing in federal needle exchange legislation. The second highlighted a post by Scott Morgan about how marijuana is easier to get than beer.

StoptheDrugWar.org is the #1 source for the latest news, information and activism promoting sensible drug law reform and an end to prohibition worldwide.

ASA Fresno Chapter Patients and Caregivers Monthly Meeting

Posted in In the Trenches by thawkinsjr on Fri, 11/06/2009 - 3:44am

ASA Fresno Chapter Patients and Caregivers Monthly Meeting

Tuesday, November 10th at 6:00 pm

Last chance to buy tickets for DPA conference

Posted in In the Trenches by David Guard on Thu, 11/05/2009 - 1:27pm

Dear friends:

It's not too late to join MPP staff at the 2009 International Drug Policy Reform Conference in Albuquerque on November 12-14. The conference — hosted by the Drug Policy Alliance and co-sponsored by MPP and other organizations — will bring together leading drug policy experts to weigh in on issues such as medical marijuana legislative efforts, marijuana arrests, and quite a few other drug policy reform topics.

MPP staffers will be on hand to discuss topics like messaging, effective activism, and medical marijuana patients' rights.

Here are a few examples of sessions featuring MPP staff:

* Aaron Houston, MPP's director of government relations, will talk about Congress, President Obama, and the drug czar.

* Karen O'Keefe, director of state policies, will talk about medical marijuana patients' rights and safe access to medical marijuana. 

* I'll speak on a panel about how to leverage this crucial moment in the fight to end marijuana prohibition.

This conference happens only once every two years, so if you miss this one, you'll have to wait two years for the next one. You can find more information and register by visiting http://www.reformconference.org today.

Will you join MPP at the one of the most important drug policy events of 2009?  We hope to see you there.

Sincerely,

 Rob Signature

Rob Kampia
Executive Director
Marijuana Policy Project
Washington, D.C.

P.S. As I've mentioned in previous alerts, a major philanthropist has committed to match the first $2.35 million that MPP can raise from the rest of the planet in 2009. This means that your donation today will be doubled.

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