The Week Online with DRCNet, Issue #134 -- April 21, 2000
     A Publication of the Drug Reform Coordination Network

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 This issue can be also be read on our web site at
<http://www.drcnet.org/wol/134.html>.)

Due to the coinciding holidays, we are not presenting our usual
coverage of drug policy news.  Instead, this issue focuses on
current action items, event listings and job listings.  Our usual
coverage will return next week.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. Raise Your Voice!  Students with Drug Convictions Losing
   Financial Aid July 1st
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/134.html#raiseyourvoice

2. Hawaii:  Senate Voting on Medical Marijuana Bill Next Week
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/134.html#hawaii

3. New York:  Letters Needed, Protests Mobilizing, Hearings
   Scheduled
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/134.html#newyork

4. Washington State:  Medical Marijuana Sign-on Letter in
   Legislature
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/134.html#washington

5. Stop the Helicopters
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/134.html#helicopters

6. Upcoming Events
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/134.html#events

7. Job Opportunities
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/134.html#jobs

================

1. Raise Your Voice!  Students with Drug Convictions Losing
   Financial Aid July 1st
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/134.html#raiseyourvoice

Tens, perhaps hundreds of thousands of students will lose all
federal financial aid under a provision of the Higher Education
Act (HEA) passed in 1998, going into effect July 1.  Several
things are needed to help get this destructive law repealed:

1) Visit http://www.RaiseYourVoice.com to send a letter to
Congress supporting H.R. 1053, a bill to repeal the HEA drug
provision.  Tell your friends and other like-minded people to
visit this web site.  Follow up your e-mail and faxes with phone
calls; our system will provide you with the phone numbers to
reach your US Representative and your two US Senators.

2) Educators are needed to endorse our sign-on letter to
Congress.  If you teach or are otherwise involved in education,
or are in a position to talk to educators, please write to us at
[EMAIL PROTECTED] to request a copy of our educators letter
and accompanying activist packet -- available by US mail or by e-
mail.

3) Please contact us if you are involved with organizations that
have mainstream credibility that might endorse a similar
organizational sign-on letter -- organizations endorsing already
include the NAACP, American Public Health Association, ACLU,
United States Student Association, NOW, and a range of social,
religious and other groups.

4) We urgently need to hear from students who have been affected
by this law, especially students who are willing to go public.

5) We need students at more campuses to take the reform
resolution to their student governments.  Campuses recently
endorsing it include University of Michigan, Yale University,
University of Maryland, University of Kansas, the Association of
Big Ten Schools, Douglass College at Rutgers University and many
more.  Visit http://www.u-net.org for information on the student
campaign and how to get involved.  (The site being updated this
coming week, but is still useful even now.)

Visit http://www.RaiseYourVoice.com and make your voice heard!

================

2. Hawaii:  Senate Voting on Medical Marijuana Bill Next Week
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/134.html#hawaii

Hawaii's medical marijuana bill, S.B. 862, is expected to face a
final vote in the state Senate sometime between Monday and
Thursday of next week, April 24-27.  Last month, the Senate
passed an earlier version of the bill with a 13-12 vote.  If only
one Senator changes his or her vote from "yes" to "no," the bill
will fail.  If the bill passes again, then Gov. Cayetano, who has
supported it all again, has promised to sign it, and medical
marijuana patients in Hawaii could have the right to legally grow
and use marijuana as soon as early May.

If you live in Hawaii, then PLEASE CONTACT YOUR STATE SENATOR
TODAY!  Just visit http://www.mpp.org/Hawaii/ and take just two
minutes or less to send a free e-mail or fax to your Hawaii state
Senator.  While you are doing that, please write down your
Senator's phone number (the system will display it) and call as
well, or call the Hawaii public access room at (808) 587-0478.

PLEASE TELL EVERYONE YOU KNOW IN HAWAII WHO MIGHT SUPPORT THE
RIGHT OF PATIENTS WHO NEED MARIJUANA MEDICINALLY TO NOT BE
ARRESTED FOR IT.  Whether you are from Hawaii or not, you can use
the web sites "tell-a-friend" form to let them know to visit
http://www.mpp.org/Hawaii/ or forward this alert directly.

S.B. 862 would provide protection from arrest and imprisonment to
patients who use and grow medical marijuana with their doctors'
approval and physicians who make such recommendations, similar to
the ballot initiatives that have passed in Alaska, California,
Maine, Oregon, and Washington state, provisionally in Nevada
(initiatives must pass twice there) and in Washington, DC (law's
status still in limbo).

The initial version of this bill passed the Hawaii House of
Representatives on March 7 by a vote of 32-18 vote.  The same
day, the Hawaii Senate passed a slightly different bill 13-12.
The 13 "yes" votes in the Senate consisted of 11 Democrats and 2
Republicans, Anderson (R), Bunda, Chumbley, Fukunaga, Hanabusa,
Ihara, Kanno, Levin, Matsunaga, Mizuguchi, Oakland, Slom (R) and
Taniguchi.  The 12 "no" votes, all Democrats opposing medical
marijuana, were Buen, Chun, D. Ige, M. Ige, Iwase, Inouye,
Kawamoto, Matsuura, Nakata, Sakamoto, Tam and Tanaka.  The
current version of S.B. 862 was passed by the House on April 11
by a vote of 29-20.

Most of the information in this article was provided by the
Marijuana Policy Project (MPP).  This Hawaii medical marijuana
alert site, <http://www.mpp.org/Hawaii>, is sponsored by MPP,
DRCNet and the Drug Policy Forum of Hawaii
(http://www.drugsense.org/dpfhi).

================

3. New York:  Letters Needed, Protests Mobilizing, Hearings
   Scheduled
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/134.html#newyork

The campaign to repeal the Rockefeller Drug Laws is mobilizing
for a May 8th protest in Albany, marking the 27th anniversary of
the enactment of these unjust laws.  Please visit
http://www.kunstler.org/wmknewsletter.html on the web site of the
Kunstler Fund for Racial Justice for information on the 5/8
protest and how you can be a part of it, or call the Kunstler
vigil hotline at (212) 539-8441.

Whether you live in New York state or not, please visit
<http://www.drcnet.org/states/newyork/>, a partnership of DRCNet
and ReconsiDer: Forum on Drug Policy (http://www.reconsider.org).
Use the site to e-mail or fax your legislators if you haven't
already -- besides directing needed correspondence to lawmakers,
DRCNet will also get your legislative district and be able to
contact you if special support is needed in your part of the
state.  If you don't live in New York, please use the site's
tell-a-friend form to let people you know there about this
important issue.

An important public hearing on the "Effects of Incarceration on
Families of Inmates" will be held by the Assembly Standing
Committee on Children and Families, Assembly Standing Committee
on Correction and Assembly Standing Committee on Codes, May 4th
at John Jay College in New York City.  Point your browser to
http://www.drcnet.org/wol/nymay4hearings.doc to find out more, or
call Judi L. West at (518) 455-4371 to find out how to sign up to
make a presentation.  Contact Terri Derikart of the New York
chapter of Families Against Mandatory Minimums ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
to get involved in this and other justice reform efforts in New
York state.

================

4. Washington State:  Medical Marijuana Sign-on Letter in
   Legislature
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/134.html#washington

Washington law has allowed for medical marijuana research and
distribution since 1979.  Unfortunately, however, the program has
been closed since the early 1980s.

To help reopen the program, Washington State Senator Jeanne Kohl-
Welles (D-Seattle) has authored a letter on behalf of state
legislators to state Secretary of Health Mary Selecky, asking her
to make an application to the federal government to open a
medical marijuana research program.

Whether this letter creates a significant impression on Selecky
and spurs her to action depends on the number of state
legislators that sign on to Senator Kohl-Welles' letter.  Our
goal is to encourage every state representative and state senator
to add their names to the letter.

Please visit http://www.mpp.org/Washington/ to send an e-mail or
fax to your elected state officials, asking them to sign on to
Senator Kohl-Welles' letter and join the coalition of legislators
who recognize the need for medical marijuana research.  If you
don't live in Washington but know people there, please visit and
use the "tell-a-friend" form or forward this bulletin to them
directly.  This web site is a collaboration of DRCNet and the
Marijuana Policy Project (MPP).

================

5. Stop the Helicopters
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/134.html#helicopters

The much criticized $1.7 billion Colombia military aid package
has passed the House of Representatives but stalled in the
Senate.  Republican leadership have promised that the package,
primarily military anti-drug aid, including expensive Blackhawk
helicopters, will be taken up during the normal appropriations
cycle in a couple of months.

Only an outpouring of citizen opposition can stop this ill-
conceived legislation from passing and prevent the increase of
human rights that will result if the much condemned Colombian
military receives this funding.  Please visit
http://www.drcnet.org/stopthehelicopters/ to tell Congress you
oppose the Colombia package, and please tell your friends and
spread the word!

================

6. Upcoming Events
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/134.html#events

April 26-29, Portland, OR, "NASEC X, The Tenth North American
Syringe Exchange Convention," sponsored by the North American
Syringe Exchange Network.  Visit http://www.nasen.org, e-mail
[EMAIL PROTECTED] or call 253-272-4857 for further information.

May 3, Washington, DC, "Building Peace in the Midst of War: Civil
Society Initiatives in Colombia," seminar presented by the
Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) and the George
Washington University (GWU) Andean Seminar on Culture and
Politics.  At GWU's Marvin Center, room 403, noon to 2:00pm,
simultaneous translation available.  Contact Peter Clark of WOLA
at (202) 797-2171 or [EMAIL PROTECTED] or Jamie Foster of GWU at
[EMAIL PROTECTED] for further information.

May 6, "Millennium Million Marijuana March," visit
http://www.cures-not-wars.org for further information.

May 8, Albany, NY, protest marking the 27th anniversary of the
Rockefeller Drug Laws.  Call (212) 539-8441, write
[EMAIL PROTECTED] or visit http://www.kunstler.org for further
information.

May 10-13, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 9th International Conference
on Penal Abolition. At Ryerson Polytechnic Metropolitan United
Church, $200 CND (agency), $140 CND (individual), $40 low-income,
negotiable. Visit http://www.interlog.com/~ritten/icopa.html for
info and to register.

May 17-20, Washington, DC, the 13th International Conference on
Drug Policy Reform, sponsored by the Drug Policy Foundation.
Visit http://www.dpf.org, e-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] or call (202)
537-5005 for further information.

August 10-13, San Francisco, CA, "Fourth Annual Hepatitis C
Conference," sponsored by the HCV Global Foundation.  For
information or to register, visit http://www.hcvglobal.org or
contact Krebs Convention Management Services, 657 Carolina
Street, San Francisco, CA 94107-2725, (415) 920-7000, fax (415)
920-7001, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

================

7. Job Opportunities
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/134.html#jobs

DRCNet is currently offering a temporary 20-hour/week position
working on the Higher Education Act reform campaign described in
the first article of this issue.  The ideal candidate will be of
college age or near college age, highly motivated, self-starting,
and will have good computer, writing, organizational and phone
skills.  Available immediately.  DRCNet is located in the Dupont
Circle area of Washington, DC.  Send resumes and inquiries to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

The November Coalition, a non-profit, grassroots organization
dedicated to a reform of the nation's War on Drugs and the
release of nonviolent drug prisoners, is seeking a qualified
individual to head the organization's Nation Vigil Project.
Write to Paul Lewin, [EMAIL PROTECTED], for a complete
description of the position.  Visit http://www.november.org to
learn more about the organization.  Applicants should send a
brief cover letter and resume to Paul Lewin at (760) 320-8169
(fax) or e-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] by May 31, 2000.  Interviews
will be offered to selected candidates in June, 2000.

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