-msg forwarded-

Hey -

There is another evil California rave law that just passed the California
Assemby by a 79-0 margin.

Please visit http://ga1.org/campaign/rave_rights to send a letter to your
California state assembly representative. If we are very lucky, the bill
will die a quiet death by inaction in committee.

Please visit the web site! If you do not speak up, no one else will!!!

And remember -

Zero Tolerance - A symptom of Zero Thinking
-Anon

4. Rave Regulation Bill Passes California Assembly on Unanimous Vote,

  http://www.drcnet.org/wol/240.html#raveregulation

A bill that would force rave promoters to certify that they are familiar
with illegal drugs and how to prevent their use at the popular electronic
music events has passed the California Assembly on a 79-0 vote. Now it is
headed for action in the state Senate.  The bill authored by Rep. Nancy
Havice (D-Bellflower) would also impose unprecedented regulatory
restrictions on raves in the state. It is formally supported by Attorney
General Bill Lockyer, the California Narcotics Officers Association (which
is identified as a "sponsor" in a February legislative analysis), the
California State Sheriffs' Association, the California Peace Officers'
Association and Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs, Inc.

AB 141, the innocuously named "act to add Section 53087.6 to the
Government Code, relating to law enforcement," includes the following

provisions, as listed in the Legislative Analyst's office's review of the
legislation:

* "Establishes requirements for issuing a local permit for a "rave party,"
defined as an electronic music dance event that may be attended by 500 or
more persons.

* "Requires a local permit granting authority to notify the local law
enforcement agency when it is considering a permit for a rave party.

* "Requires a promoter applying for a permit for a rave party to:

* Submit the application for the permit at least 30 days in advance;

* Notify local law enforcement of its application;

* Include in the permit application a list of all of the rave applications
the promoter has submitted in the past;

* Present evidence showing the promoter is knowledgeable about illegal
drugs and drug paraphernalia and can recognize the presence of drugs at a
rave;

* Acknowledge in writing that the promoter will not permit, condone, or
ignore violations of state and local laws relating to drugs and drug
paraphernalia at the rave."

"It is my sincere belief that our children are facing an ever- changing
and often dangerous world. In authoring this bill, I know I am doing my
part to help protect all children by limiting our children's access to
drugs," said Assemblywoman Havice in the bill's analysis section.

Civil and cognitive liberties groups and rave fans don't deny that drug
use, especially of MDMA (ecstasy), exists at raves, but say that the bill
nfringes on civil rights of promoters and event- goers alike. The
Southern California ACLU, for example, initiated an Internet-based
campaign to block what it called an "anti-rave, anti-free speech bill."

"[The bill] picks out one type of speech event, a rave, and makes it
harder to hold one than to hold another similar event, such as a wedding
party, a folk music festival, or a religious concert,"  the group wrote at
its campaign web site (http://ga1.org/campaign/rave_rights/). "It is not
the government's job to judge what kind of music people should listen to,
what kind of clothes and accessories they should wear, or what kind of
dance party they can attend," contended the Southern California ACLU.

Assemblywoman Havice's spokesman Carlos Benilla told the University of
Southern California newspaper the Daily Bruin "we're not targeting a
specific kind of music; we're targeting a specific kind of activity that
is taking place."

One Trojan, USC musicology grad student and electronic music fan Griffin
Woodworth, told the Daily Bruin he feared the bill would have a negative
impact on the music. He acknowledged drug use at raves, but said that was
no reason to legislate against a certain style of music. "Drugs do not
make the music, and music does not cause the drugs," Woodworth said.

And if Havick hopes that her bill will "protect all children," it may have
the opposite effect. "Harm reduction" groups, such as DanceSafe
(http://www.dancesafe.org), which provides pill testing and other services
at raves, would not be allowed to do their work at permitted events, the
bill's supporters said.

The bill is awaiting committee assignment in the Senate. The legislative
session ends August 31. Given the overwhelming support for the bill in the
Assembly, the best bet for opponents may be to let the bill die a quiet
death by inaction in committee.

(To view the text, history, and various analyses of the bill, go to
http://www.assembly.ca.gov/acs/acsframeset2text.htm and type in "AB1941.")


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