Showing posts with label Top clips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Top clips. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Front page, my first time covering national news, and my first press conference – although I did get to interview Stone afterward to get a lot more useful detail.

Scotts Valley survivors of SFO crash describe wreck, confusion




Click photo to enlarge
Elliot Stone (center) and his fianc Elena Jin (right) make their way to a press... ( SCS )

SCOTTS VALLEY -- Elliot Stone has had a lifetime of training in martial arts, but none in emergency medicine. Still he was one of the first responders to reach four victims who were torn from the Asiana jumbo jet Flight 214 as it crashed at San Francisco International Airport on Saturday.

The plane came in for a landing flying too low and too slow. The landing gear crashed against the seawall, ripping open the back of the airplane and scattering people onto the runway, while the rest of the plane careened down the tarmac.

Just seconds came between Stone's realization that something was wrong and the impact. He was seated next to Elena Jin, 23, his fiancee from Santa Cruz whom he had proposed to a day earlier at their hotel in Suwon, South Korea.

"All that went through my mind was grabbing her arm, looking in her eyes and saying, 'This might be it,' " he said.

When the plane finally stopped, Stone, 25, said he and his friends and family were able to escape quickly.

Stone, the owner of Elite Martial Arts Academy in Scotts Valley, and a group of nine people including family and clients, had been in South Korea for 10 days on a vacation and to compete in an international competition in the Korean martial art of ho kuk mu sul.

He said he's been studying the art since he was 7, and credits it with helping him to remain calm in any situation.

WHAT IF

While in Korea, he tested for his fourth-degree black belt in the sport. One of his students, David Schimmel, 19, of Scotts Valley won first place in the competition.

On the trip back, Stone and the rest of the group, including Brian Thomson, 45, Elliot's parents, Walter Stone, 64, and Cindy Stone, 63, and his brother Oliver Stone, 29, all of Scotts Valley, and Elena's 16-year-old sister, Alisa Jin, of Santa Cruz, were seated in the middle of the plane above the wings.

"One of the things that causes me extreme anxiety is the what if," Walter Stone said about his whole family being on one ill-fated flight.

After the crash, some of the group escaped on inflatable chutes, while Elliot Stone and others had to climb out over piles of rubble and luggage, through holes in the warped, Fiberglass walls of the fuselage, jumping about 5 feet from the tilted wreck to the ground. All were lucky enough to walk away from the crash with just a few scratches and bruises.

Stone said it only took a minute for the group to reunite on the ground. They hugged and ran away from the wreck, still stranded in the middle of the vast runway. He called his grandmother so she wouldn't worry when the crash made the news. Then they went looking for people they could help.

Looking back down the path the plane had slid along, Elliot Stone said they saw a woman covered in blood, stumbling toward them, calling out for help from about 500 yards away. He, his father, brother, Schimmel and Thomson ran toward the woman and realized three more were still in the wreckage, at the end of the runway closest to the water of the San Francisco Bay, where the plane had first hit the tarmac. They split up and each stayed with one of the injured women, at least two of whom were flight attendants.

When an ambulance had not arrived about 25 minutes after the crash, Elliot Stone said he called 911. As soon as police arrived, the men were told to stop and wait with the other survivors.

"They were yelling at us, 'Go back! Go back!' " Stone said. "But we were finding people."

WAITING AND WONDERING

About 90 minutes later, a bus took them to the United Airlines terminal, where they waited another six hours.

"The biggest thing we noticed was just the lack of protocol," he recalled. "It wasn't necessarily individuals' faults, it was just they didn't know the protocol or there was no protocol. No one was directing the show."

When Elliot Stone and the rest of the uninjured passengers were ushered to the airport, he said they were shuffled around between rooms, told to write their contact information on a list, and not allowed to leave or informed about what was happening. He called CNN and told his story to Wolf Blitzer while he waited.

"It makes sense that if they were ruling out terrorism or something they wouldn't let us go, but it seemed pretty straightforward what happened," he said.

The Boeing 777 had taken off in Shanghai and stopped in Seoul before crossing the Pacific on a flight that Stone described as uneventful, until the end. The crash landing injured at least 180 of the 307 people on board and killed two 16-year-old Chinese girls who were on their way to a summer camp in Southern California.

Stone said he thinks one of the deceased was among the four women he and his family and friends found in their initial search for survivors.

Despite the ordeal, Stone said thinks he will fly again.

"We'll get there when get there," he said. "It shouldn't stop us from living our lives."

Sunday, June 30, 2013

My second city council of the week: Capitola. The meeting ended around 11:30 p.m. so this online version is much more detailed than the one that ran in the paper on June 28.

Capitola City Council approves upscale senior living project





CAPITOLA -- The Capitola City Council approved a 23-unit housing complex for seniors at 1575 38th Ave. with a 4-1 vote late Thursday.

The project has been in the works since 2011, and originally was denied by the Planning Commission, which gave a directive to reduce the mass, scale and height of the proposed building. The building has since shrunk by a factor of three from its original 67-unit size, and has gained approval by the commission, but the community remains divided over many aspects of the development.

"The principle decision is whether or not we're going to overturn the Planning Commission's decision," said Vice Mayor Sam Storey of the Commission's 3-2 vote to allow the project to go ahead.

The council's approval means the zoning for the property, which is currently the site of Capitola Freight and Salvage, will be changed from neighborhood commercial to planned development, allowing for less setback from the street and a higher overall height for the building.

For a property to be zoned for planned development, it has to have a unique characteristic that warrants the change.

"It is upscale senior housing in Capitola, and we do not have that," said Councilman Ed Bottorff.

He said one of the reasons the Planning Commission denied the project originally was lack of parking.

With the new design, he said, "I think there's overkill on the parking."

Nathan Schmidt, the project's transportation planner, said the project is designed to allow 1.4 parking spaces per unit, and he expects fewer than half of those spaces will be used regularly.

"I'm not a fan of (planned development zoning)," said Mayor Stephanie Harlan, the lone dissenting vote. "I've seen it before and it's a way to get around the rules."

Harlan called the change "spot zoning," saying that the purpose of zoning is for residents of an area to know what type of development they can expect around them and changing the zoning for one property violates that understanding.

Harlan also expressed concern that vehicles would still overflow into the spaces at King's Plaza Shopping Center, located across the street from Villa Capitola, on 41st Avenue.

George Ow, owner of the shopping center, spoke in support of the project. Ow was opposed to the development in its first iteration.

The center's delivery and garbage pickup areas face the Villa Capitola site, raising concerns about potential noise disturbances.

"I think we can all agree that there is a need for more senior housing in Capitola and that demographic data show that that need will increase," Maureen Romac, one of the owners of the property, told the council.

Richard Grunow, community development director for the planning commission, said the new design, with a lower overall height and increased setback from the street, addresses the concerns that led to the agency's original denial of the project.

In addition to parking, the council debated landscaping, the revised size of the project and even the length of time residents will be allowed to have a live-in caretaker at the property without the project crossing the line from senior housing to assisted living.

"It seems like cruel and unusual punishment for a person who's starting to fall down to be told you have to move," said Santa Cruz County resident Charles Houdleston, 71.

Susan Sneddon, Capitola city clerk, said her office has received 38 letters and emails about the Villa Capitola project -- an unusually large volume.

While most of those letters are from seniors and family members of seniors expressing support for and interest in the project, the city also received a letter signed by 21 residents of Bulb Avenue, the street behind the proposed development, in opposition. Their concerns, as stated in the letter, are "privacy, shading, noise, traffic, parking and incongruency with the surrounding neighborhood."

Romac said she and her husband, Steve Thomas, co-owner of the property, have collected 180 signatures from supporters, including those of 20 residents of Bulb Avenue.

Kimberly Frey, of Bulb Avenue, spoke in opposition, saying the development will reduce the amount of sunlight on her property and allow residents of the nearby Villa Capitola to peer into her windows.

In other action, the council approved an experimental, one-day closing of the Esplanade to motor vehicles, scheduled for Oct. 13.

Monday, June 24, 2013

This ran on the front page of the Sunday paper on June 24. My first A1 centerpiece for the Sentinel.

Watsonville's growing program keeps kids reading all summer


Click photo to enlarge
Emily Hernandez shows off her cupcake thursday at the Watsonville Public Library. ... ( Dan Coyro )
WATSONVILLE -- For Leticia Valdivia and flocks of other parents, summer has long presented a struggle to keep kids engaged in reading and learning, above television and games.

Valdivia said curiosity drew her into the Watsonville Public Library. She happened to arrive in the middle of drop-in craft time for preschool kids, a weekly event that's part of the library's Summer Reading Program. She signed up both her kids for the program and they sat down at a table with craft supplies and books.

"I need a place to keep him motivated," Valdivia said of her 6-year-old son. "And, for me, the library's the best place for that."

The decades-old tradition of summer reading programs at public libraries continues to grow and thrive in Watsonville, in step with the young community it serves.

The library offers free, bilingual programs for kids and teens, and participation is booming for both.

The library has grown, too.

Located in the Watsonville Civic Plaza, the public library occupies two floors of spacious rooms with high ceilings, large windows, cheery light and comfortable chairs. Even the 110,000 volumes have room to spread out. The space was designed to accommodate at least 40,000 more, said the library's director, Carol Heitzig, and most shelves in the children's section have empty space for the collection to expand.

"They said, 'It's too big! Why'd you build it so big?'" said Hannah Clement, the librarian for the young adults section, recalling the reactions of first-time patrons of the new location, where the library has been since 2008.

"I asked them, 'Well, what do you think Watsonville's going to be like in 20 years?'" Clement said. "We didn't build a library for this year, we built a library for 20 or 25 years from now."

Demographically, the city is unusually young, with 31.6 percent of the population younger than 18, according to the 2010 U.S. Census, compared with just less than 25 percent for the rest of California and 24 percent nationwide.

Those numbers mean not only that Watsonville can expect to keep growing in coming years, but also that a lot of kids are looking for something to do.

"If they don't have anything better to do, that's when they start to get in trouble," Clement said of her specialty age group.

In the past few years, participation in the teen program has increased about 50 percent.

About 90 teens have signed up for this summer's program. A variety of events and prizes, including a Kindle Fire, paid for by the nonprofit Friends of The Watsonville Public Library, help keep them motivated and engaged. But the teen group can still be a tough audience.

"When teens sign up, being teens, I know I might never see them again," Clement said. "I give them a free book, so I know I've put a book in their hands."

The children's program, with activities designed for kids from 6 months old to 11 years old, tends to be an easier sell.

Susan Nilsson, the children's librarian, said about 300 kids in that age range already are signed up, and she expects 400 to 500 registrants before the program ends July 26.

"No matter what they read, it helps keep up their skills," Nilsson said. "I recommend comic books. They have great vocabulary."

The activities offered are frequent and varied, so turnout depends on the event and the day.

Upcoming events include a reading and activities with Deborahlise Mota and Ruth Mota, authors of the book "Don't Bug the Bugs" on Wednesday, and performances by the Banana Slug String Band on July 17, and Boswick the Clown on July 23.

Many other events recur weekly, including bilingual story times and reading buddies sessions with volunteers from Youth Now.

Nilsson said about 40 kids usually come to the drop-in, preschool craft time, from 10:30 to noon Thursdays.

"My favorite thing to do is arts and crafts," Alexcia Thomas-Martinez, 6, said as she happily drew a crayon self-portrait on the back of her paper cupcake craft.

Alexcia and her younger brother, Izaya, 5, frequent the library with their grandmother.

Newcomers are always welcome in the Summer Reading Program. There are no required meeting times and readers can sign up at any time during the summer.

Follow Sentinel reporter Ketti Wilhelm on Twitter at twitter.com/KettiWilhelm

If you go
Summer Reading Program events for children

All events are free. All are at the Main branch of the Watsonville Public Library, 275 Main St., Watsonville, or the Freedom branch of the Watsonville Public Library, 2021 Freedom Blvd., Freedom. Events that require pre-registration and are already full are not listed.

DETAILS: http://cityofwatsonville.org/city-of-watsonville/watsonville-public-library-summer-reading-program

One-time events
Wednesday: An author event for all ages, 'Don't Bug The Bugs.'6:30-7:30 p.m., Main branch
July 3: Pajama Storytime: Stuffed Animal Sleepover! A bilingual, all-ages event. Bring a stuffed animal. 6:30-7:30 p.m., Freedom branch
July 9: Storyteller Olga Loya. A bilingual, all-ages event. 6:30-7:30, Main branch
July 16: Water is SO Delicious. Meet the Water Drop, play fun water games and take home a free, reusable water bottle. Ages 5 and older. 11 a.m. to noon, at the Main branch. 1-2 p.m., at the Freedom branch
July 17: Banana Slug String Band. An all-ages event. 6:30-7:30 p.m., Main branch
July 19: Fruit and Vegetable Hat Making. An all-ages event. Noon to 2 p.m., Main branch
July 23: Boswick the Clown. An all-ages event. 6:30-7:30 p.m., Main branch
July 24: Play With Your Food. Making art with fruits and vegetables. An all-ages event. 6:30-7:30 p.m., Freedom branch
Ongoing events
Drop-in Preschool Craft Time: Drop in, socialize and make a simple craft. Ages 2-5. 10:30 to noon, Thursdays through July. Main branch
Reading Together Time: An event for kindergarten through fifth grades. 2-4 p.m., Wednesdays through July. Main branch
Reading Buddies: Volunteers from Youth Now will be at the library to read to children in July. Ages 5 to 8. 1:45-2:45 p.m., Mondays in July only, at the Main branch. 1:45-2:45 p.m., Wednesdays in July only, at the Freedom branch.
Bilingual Laptime: Stories, songs and activities. An event for ages 6 months to 24 months. 10:30 a.m., Wednesdays through July. Freedom branch
Bilingual Toddler Time: Stories, songs and activities. An event for ages 2 to 4 years. 11:30 a.m., Wednesdays through July. Freedom branch
If you go
Summer Reading Program events for teens

All events are free. All are located at the Main branch of the Watsonville Public Library, 275 Main St., Watsonville, or the Freedom branch of the Watsonville Public Library, 2021 Freedom Blvd., Freedom. Events that require pre-registration and are already full are not listed.

DETAILS: http://cityofwatsonville.org/city-of-watsonville/watsonville-public-library-summer-reading-program

Natural Beauty: Use grocery items to make your own body products. 2-4 p.m., Thursday at the Freedom branch. 2-4 p.m., July 11 at the Main branch, second floor.
Smoothie Party: Learn to make healthy, delicious smoothies. 2-4 p.m., July 18 at the Freedom branch. 2-4 p.m., July 25 at the Main branch, second floor.
Movie Nights: 6-8 p.m., Wednesdays. Main branch, second floor. 'Ristorante Paradiso,' anime, Wednesday, 'Soylent Green,' 1970s horror film, rated PG, July 10 and 'Charlie and The Chocolate Factory,' comedy, rated PG, July 24

Tuesday, March 19, 2013


Here's the reason I haven't posted in three weeks: my first long-form story for the Montana Kaimin. All photos by the very talented Samuel Wilson

PROHIBITION PAINS

Medical marijuana in a 'weird situation' in Montana
Posted: Friday, March 15, 2013 1:58 am | Updated: 4:05 am, Fri Mar 15, 2013.

The carpet of a smoky, one-bedroom apartment overlooking the Clark Fork River is dotted with cigarette burns — reminders of days when powerful narcotic painkillers became too much for the 110-pound woman whose life fills those small rooms.
She’s impressively spry for how sick her body is from leukemia, severe degenerative scoliosis and a damaged heart after multiple major cardiac arrests. But her life has gotten much easier since she moved to Montana from the Southeast several years ago.

“I found peace here,” she said. “And a lot of the peace is that I can get the medication I need legally.”
That medication is marijuana — and it has taken the place of three prescription pain killers that used to make her tired and groggy, sometimes so much so that she would fall asleep sitting up.
“Next thing you know, the cigarette is on the floor and so are you,” she said, shaking her head.
“You smoke enough to take the edge off the pain,” she said, standing hunched over in her kitchen, her spine contorted from scoliosis and previously broken ribs. “The cannabis doesn’t get rid of the pain, it just helps me ride the flow.”
She told her story on the condition of anonymity because she lives in a federally-funded retirement home and could be thrown out for using medical marijuana.
“If they put me out, I literally have nowhere to go,” she said with a nervous look across her usually smiling face.
Marijuana is illegal under federal law, regardless of whether it’s used as a medicine.
In her mid-60s, she’s just above the age group of most medical marijuana patients in Montana — 51 to 60, according to the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services.
If Montana’s medical marijuana system were repealed, she said she wouldn’t be able to go back to pharmaceuticals knowing “there’s something better, something that keeps me calm and keeps me pain free.”
“I’d have to go underground again,” she said, recalling how she used to buy marijuana through college students who knew how find it on the street. “That’s just the honesty of it.”

Samuel Wilson/Montana Kaimin


Hers is not the only life that has been complicated by contradictory laws from state and federal governments.
No matter what a state has on the books concerning marijuana, the federal government considers it a schedule one drug, along with heroin and many psychedelics. Schedule one, the most strictly regulated category in the federal Controlled Substances Act, means marijuana has no medical use, cannot be used safely and has high potential for abuse.
While campaigning in 2008, Barack Obama stated several times that, if elected, his administration wouldn’t pursue medical marijuana patients or providers if they were clearly acting within the realm of state law. After the election, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder confirmed that as the administration’s policy.
In the summer of 2009, with apparent federal approval, Montana’s medical marijuana industry took off. For almost two years, it was a booming mess of downtown storefronts, with everyone’s roommate boasting a “green card” certifying his or her supposedly legitimate need to smoke, and grow, medical marijuana. There were few rules and it wasn’t difficult to find someone who knew how to get around them.
Meanwhile, legitimate patients were caught up in the hysteria of a state divided between those who saw the outlandish system as a source of idiosyncratic pride, and those who were enraged by it.
Two years ago, a major upset hit Montana’s medical marijuana system.
On March 14, 2011, hours, at most, after the Legislature refused to repeal the state’s entire medical marijuana system, a coalition of state and federal agencies — including the FBI and the Drug Enforcement Agency — raided 24 medical marijuana businesses with guns drawn, destroying around $800,000 worth of plants and arresting employees.
“We won’t know, probably ever, what motivated them,” said Chris Lindsey, president of the Montana Cannabis Information Association and, at the time of the raids, an attorney for several dozen caregivers.
“That’s the 64-thousand-dollar question,” he said. “Why, in Montana, did this happen this way?”
Lindsey said three factors likely contributed.
First, the Montana Legislature failed to regulate the system effectively, so it was difficult for providers to be in compliance with state law when the laws were ambiguous and didn’t address important aspects of the business. It was easy for federal agencies to accuse businesses of violating state law.
In addition, 24 raids were enough to smack down the state’s entire industry and send a clear message.
“We’re a cheap date,” Lindsey said. “Your law enforcement dollar goes a long way in Montana. It doesn’t take a lot of raids to completely chill the industry here.”
For comparison, he added that to achieve the same effect per capita, California would require 900 raids in a single day.
And lastly, Lindsey said, the Montana Legislature was more supportive of the raids than other states’ politicians.
“Montana loves to think of itself as libertarian,” Lindsey said, “but it really only applies to guns and health care.”
The raids traumatized the industry, laying the groundwork for the Legislature to strike a death blow and end medical marijuana in Montana for the foreseeable future.

Samuel Wilson/Montana Kaimin


The Legislature did strike. But the industry fought back.
Days before the end of the 2011 legislative session, Senate Bill 423 easily passed both houses of the Legislature with broad Republican support and became law without former Gov. Brian Schweitzer’s signature.
The bill replaced the original medical marijuana program with a law Lindsey said was designed to decimate the industry with new rules, making it impossible to run a medical cannabis business.
“We now have a law that was designed not to regulate because they didn’t think there would be anything to regulate,” Lindsey said.
The new law also changed the terminology of the program — a subtle testament to what the Legislature thought of its legitimacy. Businesses selling medical marijuana, formerly known as “caregivers,” became “providers” under the new law; customers of these businesses, formerly “patients,” became “card-holders.”
The Montana Cannabis Information Association sued and won a preliminary injunction that blocked five important parts of the law from going into effect.
These five sections would have limited a medical marijuana provider to serving three card-holders, prevented a provider from accepting anything of value for its product, banned all forms of advertising, allowed warrantless searches of providers, and required doctors who recommend medical marijuana to more than 25 patients a year be investigated, at their own expense, by the state.
If those stipulations hadn’t been declared unconstitutional in district court, SB 423 would have destroyed the state’s medical marijuana industry and most patients would have been left without a legal source for their medicine, except to grow it themselves.
Lindsey said that’s the biggest reason his organization brought the suit.
“We couldn’t just walk away,” he said. “The lawsuit continues for as long as it takes. All that’s happened is we’ve been fighting for the injunction — and that’s just the prelude to the real fight.”
If the ongoing lawsuit fails, the five blocked provisions of SB 423 will be back and in full effect, but any surviving businesses will still be unregulated.
But if MTCIA wins the suit, the judge could choose to overturn the entire law, as requested, or he could make the injunction permanent. The latter, Lindsey said, is more likely. It’s anyone’s guess when the case will be decided.
Montana will remain in limbo until then, unless the Legislature acts.
“On the state level, there’s nothing to prevent an exact repeat of what we had in 2009 and 2010,” Lindsey said. “The only check is the threat of federal action.”
The federal action that started it all worked its way into Lindsey’s personal life, too.
“About six months after the raids,” he said, “I got a call from the DEA asking me to come down and talk to them, which is never really a call you want to get.”
His business involvement with Montana Cannabis, one of the businesses that was raided, ended more than a year earlier, but he hadn’t reported the business’ federally illegal actions to police, so in their eyes, he was a conspirator.
As a member of the conspiracy, Lindsey, 45, was charged with eight felonies, including possession with intent to distribute. Each charge carried a mandatory minimum sentence for a total of 85 years in prison.
“There was no defense,” Lindsey said. “Was I growing marijuana? Yeah. Was I preparing to sell it? Yes.”
Being a martyr wasn’t an option. Lindsey and his wife have serious health problems and a nine-year-old son at home. He said he couldn’t go to trial and risk abandoning his wife and son, even to make a point about the dangerous confluence of state and federal policies.
Instead, he pleaded guilty to conspiracy to maintain a drug-involved premise, a lesser charge with no mandatory minimum sentence and got five years of probation and $288,000 in fines. That figure represents his portion of the $1.7 million in gross income Montana Cannabis made while it was operating. Even though much of the income was paid out in taxes and other business expenses, the federal government considered it illegal drug money that had been laundered and must be paid back.
Lindsey’s license to practice law was suspended because of his conviction and he is now working as a paralegal in Missoula. 

In March 2011, near the end of the industry’s hey-day, almost 5,000 businesses in Montana were dispensing medical marijuana, according to the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services.
Now 300 remain, but they operate quietly, in a strange political purgatory. The storefronts have been torn down. The number of patients has fallen drastically from just more than 30,000 in June 2011, the month before SB 423 went into effect, to about 7,500 today.
Around 5,000 of those patients get their marijuana from a provider, as opposed to growing it themselves. And so far, the state refuses to tax those transactions.
That’s an odd position for a potentially profitable industry.
“We’re a group that actually wants taxes and regulations,” Lindsey said.
“The reality is that our Legislature just doesn’t like dealing with this at all,” he added. “I think they would prefer to ignore it and just hope that it goes away. Anytime you start talking about marijuana and building a system to regulate it, people say our society is just about to come unhinged.” 
Samuel Wilson/Montana Kaimin

Only two legislators have introduced bills to reform the medical marijuana system this session.
Rep. Kelly McCarthy, D-Billings, introduced four bills that would have eliminated the sections of SB 423 that are enjoined, but all died after failing to make it out of committee last month.
Two bills introduced by Missoula Democratic Sen. Dave Wanzenried fell to similar fates, but a third still stands.
Senate Bill 377 would have the same effect as McCarthy’s four bills — removing the sections of SB 423 that are suspended by the lawsuit — and would also establish a system of regulation and taxation.
“It puts into place a regulatory system that’s more comprehensive and more reasonable than the one we have in place now,” Wanzenried said.
The bill also would establish a new position for marijuana exchange brokers.
Nathan Pierce, the director of Montana Coalition for Rights, the group that helped draft SB 377, said this would solve a common supply problem for providers. Marijuana is a difficult crop to grow and, as with any agricultural endeavor, harvests aren’t guaranteed. Some growers end up with more than they can sell, while others see their crops fail.
“It’s going to be a lot like a real estate broker,” Pierce said. “You have a buyer and seller. The exchange broker would just be there to facilitate the exchange” between two providers.
Under the bill, brokers would have to pay $1,500 each quarter to maintain their licenses.
Quarterly fees to be paid by providers would include $1,000 for each location marijuana-infused products are sold, $15 for each card-holder registered to the provider and $1 for each plant.
These funds would be split equally between state parks and recreation areas, the facility and technology account for public schools, certain Medicaid services, and public works.
Pierce said the bill’s fee structure draws on some of the regulations Colorado is implementing for legal recreational marijuana and on other states’ medical programs.
SB 377 also loosens some restrictions. For example, providers would no longer need to get background checks, cardholders could have 2.5 ounces of cannabis and six mature plants instead of the current one ounce and four plants and post-traumatic stress disorder would be added to the conditions for which cannabis could be prescribed.
The bill is waiting for review by the Senate Judiciary Committee. Wanzenried said he expects the committee to have a hearing on it late next week.

While the Big Sky State is still trying to sort out medical marijuana, many other states are moving on toward decriminalization or legalization.
“There’s a whole lot of stuff going on in virtually every state but Montana,” said Justin Michels, director emeritus of the Montana chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.
According to Michels, eight states, including Oregon, have pending legislation to legalize marijuana for recreational use. A dozen more, including some generally conservative states like Texas, Missouri and South Carolina, are working on decriminalizing it, while 11 states are considering implementing a medical marijuana program.
Montana was ahead of its neighbors when voters established the state’s medical marijuana program in 2004. Still, none of the states bordering Montana have implemented medical marijuana systems or decriminalization, and none of them show signs of changing anytime soon.
Decriminalization makes marijuana possession no longer a criminal offense. Fourteen states, including Oregon and Minnesota, have decriminalized possession of marijuana to some extent.
In an historic election last fall, Washington and Colorado legalized marijuana for those over 21 years old.
Not to be outdone, Michels said Montana’s NORML is looking to follow suit.
“We’re trying to pull together some polling numbers to see if it would be worth our while to go for legalization in 2015,” he said.
Even in Washington and Colorado, complications abound and the threat of federal reprisal overshadows efforts at every stage of policy reform.
Marijuana is still banned on the campus of any Washington or Colorado college that receives federal funding. The same is true of medical marijuana for cardholders on Montana campuses.
“The University receives federal money,” said Mike Frost, interim director of Counseling and Psychological Services at the University of Montana.
“There’s not a university around the country that wants to jeopardize those monies by violating federal law,” he added. “We’d be shutting down a big part of our campus if we didn’t give out federal financial aid.”

Lately, campus cops have busted fewer students for marijuana. Last Friday was yet another slow night for University Police officer Nic Painter, in charge of patrolling UM property in search of rowdy drunks, vandals and pot smokers.
“Arresting people isn’t fun,” Painter said. “I don’t find any joy in it. It would be nice to be busier, though.”
Resident advisers sometimes add action to officers’ shifts when they call in suspiciously noxious smells wafting out from under dorm room doors. But at the dorms’ front desks, every RA confirmed there was no trouble that night.
“I don’t know if people are getting smarter — they’re not doing it in the dorms — or if RAs’ noses are getting worse,” Painter said, but the calls just aren’t coming in.
Painter isn’t imagining it. Marijuana use in Montana has declined over the last decade, said Jon Gettman, a professor at Shenandoah University in Virginia, who studies marijuana trends across the country.
But the number of marijuana-related arrests in Montana more than doubled between 2003 and 2007 and has increased across the country, Gettman said, making UM an anomaly.
Arrests by University Police for any sort of drug offense fell from 68 in 2009 to 37 in 2011. The majority of those incidents happened in campus housing.
One consequence of such incidents is a counseling program called Self Over Substance, which combines information sessions with group therapy, which students take when written up for a drug or alcohol violation on campus.
Almost 100 students were mandated to take SOS for marijuana offenses on campus in 2012, Frost said.
Each student paid the program fee, $70, for a first offense and $130 for subsequent offenses, but that only covers about 40 percent of the cost of the program.
The remaining $72,000 in SOS’s annual budget comes from students’ registration fees every semester, Interim Curry Health Center Director Rick Curtis said.
A student who is referred by an RA for marijuana, alcohol or other drug offenses takes the same SOS program as a student who gets an MIP alcohol citation from police, on or off campus. But if the police are called when a student is caught with marijuana, even on campus, he or she has to take a state-sanctioned misdemeanor dangerous drug program. In Missoula, that means a 12-hour informational course at a privately-operated chemical dependency treatment center called Turning Point — to the tune of $400.
“Your guess is as good as mine for why they have different programs for marijuana and for alcohol,” Curtis said. “It’s all up to the Legislature. It’s the politics of it, I guess.” 

It’s not just state legislatures that take up marijuana policy changes. On the national level, several bills that could end the perpetual conflict between state and federal laws await committee review.
The Marijuana Tax Equity Act, introduced by Congressman Earl Blumenauer, D-Ore., would allow the federal government to tax marijuana, in states where it is legal, the way alcohol and tobacco are taxed. Blumenauer also introduced a bill that prevents the federal government from interfering with states’ medical marijuana programs.
Congressman Jared Polis, D-Colo., introduced House Resolution 499, the Ending Federal Marijuana Prohibition Act, which would remove marijuana from the federal Controlled Substances Act, leaving states unencumbered by federal laws in deciding their own marijuana policy.
If that bill becomes law, it would be another instance of changes in marijuana policy mirroring the changes that led to the end of alcohol prohibition.
Kyle Volk, a UM professor of American history, said during Prohibition alcohol was illegal at federal and state levels, just like marijuana is now.
“In the mid-1920s, some states started repealing their enforcement legislation and then it was up to the federal government to enforce it if they wanted to,” Volk explained.
In 1933, Prohibition ended, leaving states to choose their own alcohol policies. Thirty-three years later, every state had ended Prohibition.
The bills before Congress have the potential to completely change the way states approach marijuana, both medical and recreational. Otherwise, federal law will inevitably overshadow state law.
“Nothing’s really going to change until it changes at the federal level,” Michels said. “It’s a weird situation at this point.”