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OfflineLothar121
Marijuanaactivist
Registered: 04/15/03
Posts: 105
Loc: Texas
Last seen: 17 years, 11 days
Re: HB 254 Committee Hearing rescheduled Good News! [Re: blaze2]
    #3965430 - 03/24/05 03:12 PM (19 years, 8 days ago)

Texas -- Instead of handcuffs and jail time, people caught in possession of an ounce or less of marijuana could get a ticket and lose their driver's licenses for six months under a bill before the Legislature.
House Bill 254, sponsored by state Rep. Harold Dutton, D-Houston, would make possession of an ounce or less of marijuana a Class C misdemeanor, the category of most traffic violations. The offense is now a Class B misdemeanor.

Offenders would have to undergo drug counseling.

The change would save the state millions, if not billions, in prison and court costs over the long run while giving casual marijuana users the opportunity and assistance they need to become drug-free, Dutton said.

"It's not a matter of being soft on crime, it's more a matter of being smart on crime," Dutton said. "This would free up the state's resources to deal with major crimes."

Current law assesses the same punishment for possession of a few seeds of marijuana as it does for as much as 2 ounces.

Citations for Class B misdemeanors can carry fines up to $500. The driver's license suspension was added to the penalty to comply with federal drug laws. Otherwise, the state would lose about $200 million a year in federal highway funding.

The penalty would increase to a Class B misdemeanor with the third conviction.

Opponents of the bill say that decreasing the penalty for possession of lesser quantities will send the wrong message and lead to greater use of marijuana.

"Kids already think marijuana is normal and harmless," said Castleberry High School student Erin Stubbs, a member of a county student coalition against drugs. "It's not a good idea."

Many Texans do not seem to be taking that message to heart, Dutton told the Criminal Justice Committee at a recent hearing on the bill.

Dutton said that according to FBI statistics, about 52,000 people were arrested in Texas on marijuana charges in 2002. Of those, 49,839, or 97 percent, were charged with simple possession of a small amount of marijuana.

Prosecuting those 97 percent cost taxpayers about $490 million while straining the capacity of county jails and the caseloads of parole officers, he said.

The American Civil Liberties Union and the Austin chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws testified in support of the bill.

Thirty-five percent of the Texans arrested for simple possession of marijuana are ages 15 to 19; people ages 20 to 24 make up 28 percent of those arrests, said Judie Niskala with NORML.

"Passage of House Bill 254 will assure that the youthful indiscretions of tens of thousands of otherwise law-abiding citizens will not result in the lifelong indignity and lack of opportunity that accompanies a criminal record," Niskala told committee members.

The Texas Justice Court Judges Association is neutral on the bill, Collin County Justice of the Peace Terry Douglas told the committee.

No one spoke against the bill at the public hearing.

But at a marijuana-education workshop Tuesday, John Haenes, juvenile drug court supervisor for Tarrant County Juvenile Services, said: "We are against any decriminalization or penalty reductions. It creates a problem for us when we try to convinces youths that they should not be using marijuana."

The workshop was sponsored by the Tarrant County Challenge Coalition. About 90 counselors and intervention specialists from area school districts and organizations talked about the hazards of marijuana and ways to persuade teen-agers not to use the drug.

? A Houston representative says his bill would save the state millions of dollars while directing casual drug users into counseling.

Source: Ft. Worth Star-Telegram (TX)
Author: Matt Frazier, Star-Telegram Staff Writer
Published: March 24, 2005
Copyright: 2005 Star-Telegram
Contact: letters@star-telegram.com
Website: http://www.star-telegram.com/

Loth note: Although in this article says the penalty would increase to a class B on the third conviction, Dutton made it clear in committee that it would only go up to a class B if you are convicted 3 times in a 2 year period, not overall. All Texans need to get behind this bill.

Texans write a letter now if you haven't already!
http://capwiz.com/norml2/issues/alert/?alertid=6847791

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OfflineLothar121
Marijuanaactivist
Registered: 04/15/03
Posts: 105
Loc: Texas
Last seen: 17 years, 11 days
ACTION NOW: Committee Still Hasn't Voted! [Re: blaze2]
    #3965783 - 03/24/05 04:56 PM (19 years, 8 days ago)

Dear Friends:

As you know, last week the Texas House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee held hearings on House Bill 254, which seeks to reduce penalties for possession of up to one ounce of marijuana to a Class C misdemeanor. Members of the committee enthusiastically heard testimony from a number of the bill's supporters, including Texas NORML President Judie Niskala.

Her testimony in favor of this bill was well received by the committee's members, who agreed to consider the bill after the sponsor made a few minor changes to appease the Texas Department of Transportation. As of today, however, the committee has yet to vote on HB 254.

That is why NORML is once again asking that you please call the committee members and urge their support for HB 254, especially if your Representative happens to serve on the House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee.

The following Representatives serve on the Criminal Jurisprudence Committee:

Representative Terry Keel (R-TX 47th), Chair - (512) 463-0652 Representative Debbie Riddle (R-TX 150th), Vice-Chair - (512) 463-0572 Representative Mary Denny (R-TX 63rd) - (512) 463-0688 Representative Elvira Reyna (R-TX 101st) - (512) 463-0464 Representative Aaron Pena (D-TX 40th) - (512) 463-0426 Representative Terri Hodge (D-TX 100th) - (512) 463-0586 Representative Paul C. Moreno (D-TX 77th) - (512) 463-0638 Representative Juan Escobar (D-TX 43rd) - (512) 463-0666 Representative Richard Raymond (D-TX 42nd) - (512) 463-0558

Please take a moment today to write your Representative and tell him or her to support House Bill 254. Pre-written letters are available online from NORML at: http://capwiz.com/norml2/issues/ale...6847791&type=ST

To help support NORML's state legislative efforts, please donate today at: https://secure.norml.org/join/

Thank you again for your support of NORML's legislative efforts in Texas.

Regards,

Kris Krane, Associate Director NORML

Edited by Lothar121 (03/24/05 04:58 PM)

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OfflineLothar121
Marijuanaactivist
Registered: 04/15/03
Posts: 105
Loc: Texas
Last seen: 17 years, 11 days
Re: ACTION NOW: Committee Still Hasn't Voted! [Re: Lothar121]
    #3966008 - 03/24/05 05:49 PM (19 years, 8 days ago)

Please make the calls, even if they aren't in your district. I just finished calling all of them. I got a hold of Terry Keel and there seems to be concern that the new modified bill does not have the support the original bill form did. Although the modified bill would take away your license and require an education class, you still would not end up in jail and it would save a tremendous amount of state resources.

I strongly urge every Texan reading this to make the call and say you support HB 254, even in its modified form. This bill will flop if you do not make the calls now.

Edited by Lothar121 (03/24/05 05:54 PM)

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InvisibleCloud9
I don't feel, and it feels great
Male User Gallery

Folding@home Statistics
Registered: 07/03/03
Posts: 1,554
Loc: between here and there
Re: ACTION NOW: Committee Still Hasn't Voted! [Re: Lothar121]
    #3966774 - 03/24/05 09:28 PM (19 years, 8 days ago)

Wow good news, i've been hearing about this a lot recently, it's pretty big news around my part of SA.


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OfflineFloyd_
Stranger

Registered: 05/18/01
Posts: 207
Last seen: 7 years, 6 months
Re: ACTION NOW: Committee Still Hasn't Voted! [Re: Cloud9]
    #3966845 - 03/24/05 09:45 PM (19 years, 8 days ago)

oh man good job texas
set a good example for the other 49


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OfflineLothar121
Marijuanaactivist
Registered: 04/15/03
Posts: 105
Loc: Texas
Last seen: 17 years, 11 days
Re: ACTION NOW: Committee Still Hasn't Voted! [Re: Floyd_]
    #3968821 - 03/25/05 01:14 PM (19 years, 7 days ago)

Weed Watch: Legislators Seek Reduced Punishment Or Decriminalization
Jordan Smith | Austin Chronicle | 03/25/2005

According to the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, state and local authorities combined spend nearly $8 billion each year trying to enforce federal marijuana prohibition. In a new report ? titled "Crimes of Indiscretion"(pdf) ? NORML reports that, according to Department of Justice statistics, nearly $4 billion in costs are associated with funding police work. They also report that each marijuana-related arrest costs taxpayers more than $10,000 ? yet prohibition has done little to curb use of the drug. In Texas, nearly 50,000 people were arrested in 2002 on marijuana-related charges ? about half of all the drug-related arrests, and nearly 5% of all arrests. Indeed, state Rep. Harold Dutton cited these same numbers ? and more ? when presenting HB 254 to the House Criminal Justice committee on March 15. Dutton's bill would reduce possession of up to one ounce of marijuana to a class C misdemeanor, punishable by fine only, and would downgrade various other marijuana-possession charges. (Originally, Dutton's bill also banned the state from suspending a driver's license for individuals convicted of the downgraded misdemeanor. But Dutton removed that stipulation after learning that the feds would withhold highway funds if the state refused to revoke driving privileges for those convicted on any drug charge.) On Tuesday afternoon, Dutton pointed out that nationwide in 2003, nearly 755,000 people were arrested on marijuana-related charges, more than 90% of which were for mere pot possession. In Texas, 97% of the arrests on pot charges are for simple possession, he noted, at a cost to taxpayers of nearly $480 million per year. His is a "smart on crime" proposal, he said, that would save millions and free up law enforcement resources, and jail and prison space, which could be devoted to pursuing violent criminals.

Reps. Debbie Riddle, R-Tomball, and Terry Hodge, D-Dallas, who are on the committee chaired by Rep. Terry Keel, R-Austin, were receptive to Dutton's proposal ? although Hodge expressed some reluctance at requiring court-ordered substance-abuse risk assessments (which she seemed to think was somewhat superfluous and contrary to the measure's attempt at serious budget savings). Surprisingly, no one stepped up to testify against the measure and one victim advocate, Travis County's own Ellen Halbert ? who served as a member of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice's oversight board and is currently head of the Travis Co. District Attorney's victims assistance office ? urged support for the bill in a letter presented to the committee by ACLU attorney Ann del Llano. According to Halbert, the measure makes "really good sense," and would free up resources that should be targeting offenders who really "need to be in jail." Indeed, del Llano said, the measure would make minor pot possessors "pay into the system, instead of the system [having to] lay out tax dollars" to prosecute and incarcerate them. The bill was left pending so that Dutton could amend it to provide an enhanced penalty for repeat offenders and a provision that would send those convicted under the new law to some sort of class, akin to that required for minors convicted of alcohol possession.

In other pot-related news, Vermont state Rep. Winston Dowland earlier this month introduced legislation that would legalize marijuana and create a state system for regulation and taxation akin to alcohol regulation. In a press release, Dowland said that pot prohibition has failed in his state. Approximately 10% of Vermont residents smoke pot each month, Dowland said. "Prohibition simply has not worked," he said. "How many more billions of dollars are we going to spend on this failed policy before we stop and consider whether there might not be a better way?"
__________________

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OfflineLothar121
Marijuanaactivist
Registered: 04/15/03
Posts: 105
Loc: Texas
Last seen: 17 years, 11 days
Texans: CALL NOW! [Re: Lothar121]
    #3968825 - 03/25/05 01:15 PM (19 years, 7 days ago)

There is reluctance to support the new amended bill and we have to let the committee know that we support the amended version. If you haven't yet, I challenge you to call all the committee members, even if you are not in their district. Be polite, and let them know that you want them to motion the amended form of H.B. 254 for a committee vote and to vote yes. Tell them you wish to see some transparency within the committee and to move it to a full house floor debate. Make sure they know you are aware of the amendments to the bill, but let them know you still support it because overall it will still save the state tremendous sums of resources, lessen the amount of petty marijuana offenders in jail, and help the already clogged probation system.

Phone Numbers for the committee:

Representative Terry Keel (R-TX 47th), Chair - (512) 463-0652 Representative Debbie Riddle (R-TX 150th), Vice-Chair - (512) 463-0572 Representative Mary Denny (R-TX 63rd) - (512) 463-0688 Representative Elvira Reyna (R-TX 101st) - (512) 463-0464 Representative Aaron Pena (D-TX 40th) - (512) 463-0426 Representative Terri Hodge (D-TX 100th) - (512) 463-0586 Representative Paul C. Moreno (D-TX 77th) - (512) 463-0638 Representative Juan Escobar (D-TX 43rd) - (512) 463-0666 Representative Richard Raymond (D-TX 42nd) - (512) 463-0558

Make the call now. They will simply ask for your name, your phone number, and a brief message. In a matter of minutes your phone calls can move this bill forward instead of letting it die out pending in committee. Thanks to anyone in advance that takes action, as I already have!

Edited by Lothar121 (03/25/05 01:16 PM)

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OfflineLothar121
Marijuanaactivist
Registered: 04/15/03
Posts: 105
Loc: Texas
Last seen: 17 years, 11 days
Medical Marijuana Hearing on Tuesday in Texas [Re: Lothar121]
    #4001435 - 04/01/05 04:11 PM (19 years, 9 hours ago)

Bill 658 is scheduled for a hearing in the House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee on Tuesday, April 5th!

TMM has been working with the bills author Representative Elliott Naishtat to identify witnesses to testify at the hearing on behalf of all of us who support the bill and medical marijuana in general. Due to the large volume of other bills scheduled to have hearings in the Criminal Jurisprudence Committee, and the delays that have already occurred, both Representative Naishtat and Chairman Keel favor limiting the number of testifying witnesses in order to ensure an expedient hearing for HB 658. A concise and efficient hearing will help to facilitate the chance of the bill's passage through committee and onto the House floor for a vote.

As a result we are asking all of our supporters who wish to attend the hearing to respect Representative Naishtat's and Chairman Keel's estimation that the better organized and succinct the favorable testimony, the more likely the bill will be voted for by the committee.

If you are interested in submitting written testimony feel free to send it to me and I will present it to the members on your behalf.

To watch the hearing as it takes place, please click on http://www.house.state.tx.us/media/welcome.php to find the livestream for the Criminal Jurisprudence Committee and see and listen to it online. This committee usual meets at 2pm or upon adjournment of the House.

Furthermore, I urge you to contact (preferably by telephone) the committee members to persuade them to vote in favor of HB 658. Please click HERE (link to our fact sheet) to refer to talking points that may be helpful in your conversations with the committee members staff. For your convenience I have listed the contact information for the House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee members below. Please don't hesitate to call or email me or Karen at 512-220-9209 if you have any questions or concerns about calling the committee members.

Thank you for your continued support of TMM and for your efforts on behalf of HB 658.

Sincerely,

Noelle Davis
Executive Director

Rep. Terry Keel, Chairman, District 47 (joint author of HB 658 & therefore supportive)
Capitol Office: EXT E2.212
Capitol Address: P.O. Box 2910
Austin, Texas 78711
Capitol Phone: (512) 463-0652
District Address: P.O. Box 2910
Austin, TX 78768
District Phone: (512) 463-0652

Rep. Debbie Riddle, Vice-Chair, District 150
Capitol Office: EXT E2.208
Capitol Address: P.O. Box 2910
Austin, Texas 78711
Capitol Phone: (512) 463-0572
District Address: 3648 F.M. 1960 West, Suite 106
Houston, TX 77068
District Phone: (281) 537-5252

Rep. Aaron Pena, B&O Chair, District 40
Capitol Office: EXT E1.512
Capitol Address: P.O. Box 2910
Austin, Texas 78711
Capitol Phone: (512) 463-0426
District Address: 1108 South Closner
Edinburg, TX 78539
District Phone: (956) 383-7444

Rep. Mary Denny, District 63
Capitol Office: CAP GW.8
Capitol Address: P.O. Box 2910
Austin, Texas 78711
Capitol Phone: (512) 463-0688
District Address: 1001 Cross Timbers Road, #1245
Flower Mound, TX 75028
District Phone: (972) 724-8477

Rep. Juan M Escobar, District 43
Capitol Office: EXT E2.704
Capitol Address: P.O. Box 2910
Austin, Texas 78711
Capitol Phone: (512) 463-0666
District Address: 635 E. King Street, Room 109
Kingsville, TX 78363
District Phone: (361) 592-6120

Rep. Terri Hodge, District 100
Capitol Office: EXT E2.818
Capitol Address: P.O. Box 2910
Austin, Texas 78711
Capitol Phone: (512) 463-0586
District Address: 4032 Swiss Ave.
Dallas, TX 75204
District Phone: (214) 824-1996

Rep. Paul Moreno, District 77
Capitol Office: CAP 1W.9
Capitol Address: P.O. Box 2910
Austin, Texas 78711
Capitol Phone: (512) 463-0638
District Address: 2314 Montana
El Paso, TX 79903
District Phone: (915) 544-0789

Rep. Richard Raymond, District 42
Capitol Office: EXT E2.902
Capitol Address: P.O. Box 2910
Austin, Texas 78711
Capitol Phone: (512) 463-0558
District Address: 1110 Houston St., Third Floor
Laredo, TX 78040
District Phone: (956) 753-7722

Rep. Elvira Reyna, District 101
Capitol Office: CAP GN.11
Capitol Address: P.O. Box 2910
Austin, Texas 78711
Capitol Phone: (512) 463-0464
District Address: 18601 LBJ, #700
Mesquite, TX 75150
District Phone: (972) 279-7030

Texans, also urge the committee to put HB 254 up for a committee vote! It is still pending. Thanks.

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OfflineLothar121
Marijuanaactivist
Registered: 04/15/03
Posts: 105
Loc: Texas
Last seen: 17 years, 11 days
Good hearing. Need more phone calls [Re: Lothar121]
    #4022004 - 04/06/05 02:57 PM (18 years, 11 months ago)

HB 658 had a good hearing. The chair of the committee is very supportative. Please call the committee to let them know you support HB 658. The bill was left pending in committee. You can watch the hearing right here http://www.house.state.tx.us/fx/av/...79/50405p09.ram

Real Player required, it starts about 40 minutes into the total hearing.

I also urge all Texans to take action on HB 254 which would reduce penalties for one ounce or less of marijuana. This has been pending over 2 weeks now, and unless we send a clear message to the committee, I believe it will die this session.

You can contact all the committee members in one email here: http://www.mpp.org/TX/action.html under the link to support HB 658. You can also send a 2nd message in favor of HB 254 to the committee by erasing MPP's default letter and writing your own letter in favor of the amended form of HB 254.

Time is running out, if you haven't yet, call/write all committee members and urge support for these bills! Please spread this message to your friends and family in Texas.

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OfflineLothar121
Marijuanaactivist
Registered: 04/15/03
Posts: 105
Loc: Texas
Last seen: 17 years, 11 days
From Grits: Committee Hearing HB 658; HB 254 stalled [Re: Lothar121]
    #4037323 - 04/10/05 01:53 PM (18 years, 11 months ago)

I was out of town when HB 658, which would create an affirmative defense for medicinal marijuana use with a doctor's recommendation, was heard last Tuesday in the House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee. The hearing got decent media coverage.

(You can watch the hearing if you like. Go here for the video, and under the Regular Session Broadcasts section click on the link dated 4-5-05 with the time running from 2:07 p.m. to 6:15 p.m. Once the broadcast is up and playing, you can skip ahead 46 minutes to the beginning of the hearing for HB 658, which lasts about an hour.)

Committee chairman Terry Keel is a joint author of the bill, so they should get an opportunity to vote on it.

So far, the same can't be said for HB 254 by Dutton, which would restructure sentences for low level marijuana possession to require stiff fines for possession. That bill has been hung up in the same committee for weeks now, which is never a good sign. They're approving new laws increasing prison sentences they can't pay for -- most recently, a bill Chairman Keel carried for the Motion Picture Assocication of America making it a felony to even turn on a camera phone in a movie theater. (More on that TK.) But legislation that would give needed relief to county jails and, ironically, probably boost enforcement, so far can't get an up or down vote. Frustrating.

http://gritsforbreakfast.blogspot.com/

It appears HB 254 is not going to move from its present condition. If you haven't, please send letters and phone calls in the committee and tell them to call it up for a vote promptly. Thank you for everyone that attempted to move this bill to the governor's desk. It has been a frustrating ride. Please get behind HB 658.

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OfflineLothar121
Marijuanaactivist
Registered: 04/15/03
Posts: 105
Loc: Texas
Last seen: 17 years, 11 days
HB 254 PASSES OUT OF COMMITTEE-- Good job Texans, Support it ALL THE WAY THROUGH! [Re: Lothar121]
    #4055491 - 04/14/05 03:59 PM (18 years, 11 months ago)

That's more like it. I was starting to worry.

After sitting around for one day shy of a month after its hearing, HB 254, which would restructure sentences for low-level marijuana possession, passed out of the Texas House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee today at a desk meeting. (See a fact sheet on the bill.) There's still plenty of time for it to move through the process.

I haven't seen the vote tally, yet, but muchas gracias to committeemembers who supported it.

HB 254 would restructure sentences for possession of less than an ounce of pot to become a stiff fine, boosting local revenue and freeing up space for more dangerous inmates. A similar law in Columbia, Missouri actually boosted enforcement. See previous Grits coverage here and here.
From Grits: http://gritsforbreakfast.blogspot.com/

http://www.mpp.org/TX/action.html Take Action now, email and call your representative to support HB 254!

http://capwiz.com/norml2/issues/alert/?alertid=6847791&type=ST

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OfflineLothar121
Marijuanaactivist
Registered: 04/15/03
Posts: 105
Loc: Texas
Last seen: 17 years, 11 days
Thanks [Re: Lothar121]
    #4055558 - 04/14/05 04:09 PM (18 years, 11 months ago)

Thanks everyone here at shroomery.org that called and wrote the committee members do that we got over this huge bump. Keep in mind that we never got this far in 2003. The time for reform in Texas is 2005. Make sure you follow up with letters to your reps. We still have to get this bill to pass on the house floor, a senate committee, and the senate floor and finally get the governor to sign it into law.

Let's make this bill a reality. Spread this to your friends and family!

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OfflineLothar121
Marijuanaactivist
Registered: 04/15/03
Posts: 105
Loc: Texas
Last seen: 17 years, 11 days
Re: HB 254 PASSES OUT OF COMMITTEE-- Good job Texans, Support it ALL THE WAY THROUGH! [Re: Lothar121]
    #4056063 - 04/14/05 06:36 PM (18 years, 11 months ago)

I checked on the Texas.gov website to see the official results. The bill passed unanimously giving it even more momentum.

http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/cgi-bin/d...ILLSUFFIX=00254

House Committee: Criminal Jurisprudence
Status: Out of committee
Vote: Ayes=6 Nays=0 Present Not Voting=0 Absent=3

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