Texas
Voters in five Texas cities approved decriminalizing marijuana. Now city officials are standing in the way.
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The combat in a number of Texas cities to decriminalize marijuana has entered a brand new part, as some metropolis leaders have rebuffed voter-approved guidelines that largely finish felony enforcement towards having small quantities of the substance.
Final month, residents in Denton, San Marcos, Killeen, Elgin and Harker Heights overwhelmingly authorised poll measures that sought to ban arrests and citations for carrying lower than 4 ounces of marijuana in most cases. In addition they authorised new guidelines blocking cities from funding THC focus assessments, plus eradicating marijuana scent as a possible trigger for search and seizure normally.
Successful over voters was simply half the battle.
Since then, organizers behind the poll questions in some cities have clashed with their metropolis and county leaders who’re tasked with placing the brand new legal guidelines in place, in addition to legislation enforcement. These officers have mentioned the hassle violates state legislation and hinders law enforcement officials.
The battle has been the hardest in Harker Heights, a city of 33,000 about 55 miles southwest of Waco. Regardless of the proposition profitable greater than 60% of the votes, the Metropolis Council determined to repeal the ordinance simply two weeks later. Metropolis Supervisor David Mitchell mentioned in a subsequent letter that the choice to decriminalize ought to be left to the state.
For Harker Heights residents who supported decriminalizing marijuana, the repeal is a stinging present of disrespect for his or her train of democracy.
“I don’t do any form of medication nor does my spouse, however we’re right here for the vote,” mentioned Brian Burt, who casted his poll for the proposition.
“A vote is a vote,” Alexandra Burt chimed in. “We’re additionally conscious that minorities disproportionately take the brunt of the legislation, so it’s time for that proposition to undergo.”
To drive the Metropolis Council’s hand, the Burts and tons of of different residents backed a brand new petition by Floor Sport Texas, a progressive group that co-led the decriminalization marketing campaign, to place the council’s determination to repeal on the Could poll and revive the ordinance within the meantime.
Julie Oliver, the group’s govt director, mentioned the council’s determination to revoke a preferred selection by voters has backfired.
“Shutting down somebody’s vote is ill-advised, so this has actually introduced the neighborhood collectively,” she mentioned.
Organizers throughout the state going through comparable pushback additionally say they would like the Texas Legislature to go legal guidelines that will decriminalize and even legalize marijuana — although they acknowledge how unlikely that’s given the state’s conservative energy construction.
“We will all see the best way that this nation is heading, state by state, but it surely appears to be like like Texas goes to be one of many final,” mentioned Deb Armintor, a Decriminalize Denton organizer and a former Metropolis Council member who championed decriminalization throughout her two phrases. “There’s no level in cities ready.”
A town-by-town combat
The crux of the combat may be traced again to the state’s legalization of hemp in 2019. Whereas hemp is authorized and marijuana is just not, they’re nearly indistinguishable by sight or scent. The one technique to decide if a substance has kind of than 0.3% of THC focus — the authorized threshold that separates the 2 — is to run lab assessments. With out the assets to fulfill this requirement, many prosecutors throughout the state have dropped and delayed low-level marijuana possession instances, and a few police departments like Austin’s have adopted swimsuit by making a coverage to not cite or arrest individuals normally.
This gave organizers a gap. In Could 2022, Floor Sport Texas gained its first case as Austinites voted by 85% to codify their police division’s coverage and formally decriminalize.
“That’s the core of our reform motion,” mentioned Mike Siegel, the group’s political director.
A number of cities and cities have since adopted. Elgin, a metropolis of about 10,500 people who sits simply east of Austin, voted to decriminalize by virtually 75%. Its council has made the least quantity of noise in placing the ordinance in place.
Different metropolis and county officers, nevertheless, have raised considerations a couple of statute from the Texas Native Authorities Code that claims municipal our bodies like metropolis councils and police departments “might not undertake a coverage below which the entity is not going to totally implement legal guidelines referring to medication.”
Final month, Republican Bell County District Lawyer Henry Garza cited it when asking the police chief of Killeen, the place near 70% of voters favored decriminalization, to reverse his order telling officers to comply with the vote. Following a pause, Killeen Metropolis Council authorised the ordinance on Dec. 6 after eradicating the part banning officers from utilizing marijuana scent as possible trigger for search and seizure.
“The modification was not preferable however now our residents wouldn’t have to concern an arrest that can have an effect on their employment alternatives, schooling alternatives and housing alternatives,” mentioned Louie Minor, a Bell County commissioner-elect who labored on each the Killeen and Harker Heights campaigns.
Extra just lately, Republican Hays County Prison District Lawyer Wes Mau requested an legal professional normal opinion concerning the ordinance’s enforceability over comparable questions. Mano Amiga — the group co-leading the hassle in San Marcos — instantly pushed again, as voters had handed the proposition by virtually 82% and the Metropolis Council already authorised it in November.
Mau mentioned he has “no plans to file a lawsuit” in his final month of workplace. His Democrat successor Kelly Higgins helps decriminalization.
“The Lawyer Common can’t overturn the referendum, nor am I asking him to,” Mau mentioned in a press release to The Texas Tribune. “However an opinion as as to whether the ordinance is enforceable could also be useful to the Metropolis transferring ahead.”
Within the North Texas suburb of Denton, the place voters authorised decriminalization by greater than 70%, the Metropolis Council has additionally authorised it. However organizers fear about its enforcement as a result of Metropolis Supervisor Sara Hensley has opposed implementing elements of it as a consequence of comparable points. Organizers responded in November with a memo arguing that Hensley doesn’t have policymaking authority and that town has discretion to enact insurance policies conserving scarce assets.
Metropolis Council member Brian Beck then pitched adopting an an identical proposition via the council to resolve any confusion on the ordinance’s funds energy. He didn’t win over sufficient of his colleagues.
Decriminalize Denton is now contemplating subsequent steps, together with recalling those that voted towards Beck’s proposition.
Council members who didn’t approve the pitch — together with Mayor Gerard Hudspeth and council members Jesse Davis and Chris Watts — reiterated that the identical ordinance is already on the books and pointed to the boundaries imposed by state legislation.
“The desire of the voters should be revered completely. However the voters of Denton don’t have the power to vary or circumvent State legislation,” Davis mentioned in a press release.
Organizers and metropolis officers who help decriminalization, reminiscent of Denton Metropolis Council member Brandon Chase McGee, pointed to locations like Austin as a information.
“Comparable ordinances have been handed in different municipalities throughout this state, and to my data, these ordinances haven’t confronted any authorized challenges,” McGee mentioned in a press release.
However some metropolis leaders like Davis fear about potential retribution from state lawmakers who don’t agree with decriminalization. Legislators have pushed again on different insurance policies they don’t like — for instance, approving a invoice in 2021 that penalizes cities for reducing police budgets, in keeping with Katharine Neill Harris, a drug coverage fellow at Rice College’s Baker Institute.
However Neill Harris additionally famous that the Austin Police Division has primarily decriminalized since 2020 after which totally adopted the ordinance that codified its coverage over the previous seven months with out points. APD communications supervisor Brandon Jones advised the Tribune that “conversations with each the District Lawyer’s Workplace and County Lawyer’s Workplace have been essential in making certain we have been all on the identical web page.”
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Organizers mentioned these totally different responses from officers highlight the necessity for legislators to go statewide marijuana updates.
“It must be a legislative change on the state degree. It must be broadened out,” mentioned Shirley Fleming, a former Killeen Metropolis Council member who helps lead the initiatives in Bell County.
And most Texans need authorized marijuana, which fits additional than decriminalization. Texas lags behind large states reminiscent of California and Illinois and conservative states reminiscent of Alaska and Montana, as earlier efforts to vary state legal guidelines have confronted opposition from prime Republicans.
And since the Legislature controls what will get on the statewide poll, Texans haven’t been in a position to immediately vote on it as voters have in Maryland and Missouri.
At present, 21 states and Washington, D.C., have legalized leisure marijuana.
Texas nonetheless considers marijuana unlawful regardless of accepting hemp and derivatives like CBD. Texas additionally permits for medical hashish, however its program applies to a really restricted subset of medical problems and permits just for 1% of delta-9 THC — the identical restrict state police use to check if a hashish product is against the law for any person. To this point, this system has enrolled only a tiny fraction of the eligible inhabitants.
“We proceed to have probably the most restrictive medical packages throughout the USA,” mentioned Neill Harris, the drug coverage knowledgeable.
She added that claims about marijuana reforms resulting in extra crimes should not supported by proof. The Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention additionally says “there may be restricted proof suggesting that utilizing marijuana will increase the danger of utilizing different medication.”
Amid this legislative lag, decriminalization organizers mentioned Black Texans and different communities of coloration are going through disproportionate ranges of marijuana enforcement and the ensuing influence on their data. And that is nonetheless occurring following hemp legalization, which contributed to the state’s variety of marijuana possession arrests plummeting from the latest peak of virtually 74,000 arrests in 2010 to below 23,000 arrests in 2021.
This problem is mirrored in data requests obtained by native organizers in 2021 and reviewed by the Tribune. About 35% of arrests made by Denton police in 2019 and 2020 concerned Black people, data confirmed, though town’s Black inhabitants is simply over 11%. And round 75% of arrests made by Killeen police between 2019 and early Could 2021 concerned Black people, data indicated, however solely 39% of town’s residents are Black.
“Police want to focus on extra vital issues slightly than attempting to cease Black and brown individuals with low-level marijuana,” Fleming mentioned.
Some state legislators agree with the message despatched by these cities’ vote to decriminalize.
“That’s what occurs once we drag our toes on the state on insurance policies that almost all of the state agrees with,” mentioned state Rep. Joe Moody, D-El Paso.
Moody himself has lengthy advocated for marijuana reform. For the upcoming legislative session, for which there are already a number of payments searching for to ease marijuana legal guidelines, Moody pitched Home Invoice 218 to cut back the penalty for possessing 1 ounce of marijuana and permit for data expungement in sure instances. His comparable invoice from 2019 obtained bipartisan help within the Home, but it surely died within the Senate below Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who has lengthy opposed easing marijuana legal guidelines. Nonetheless, Moody is feeling optimistic.
And given the present Republican management, reasonable payments like his are essentially the most promising, in keeping with consultants.
Within the meantime, organizers say they are going to proceed to interrupt new floor throughout the state.
Since October, there was a marketing campaign underway in San Antonio to place a query — which proposes decriminalizing marijuana and abortion, in addition to banning no-knock warrants and chokeholds by police — in entrance of voters in Could. Floor Sport Texas and native organizers are searching for 35,000 signatures by early January to fulfill the required 20,000 verified signatures.
The marketing campaign has up to now reached over 75% of its objective.
“Of us are excited and engaged to vote for one thing that’s greater than a politician,” mentioned Ananda Tomas, govt director of Act 4 SA, which focuses on police reform.
The resistance from native officers has already began. The San Antonio Police Officers’ Affiliation took out a full-page newspaper advert final month to criticize the hassle. Its president, Danny Diaz, mentioned in a press release that the affiliation wished to sign to voters that “some issues are too good to be true,” noting that the proposed complete ban on chokeholds would hinder officers.
Town has already prohibited chokeholds besides in life-or-death conditions, although it isn’t but codified and might be modified below totally different management.
And regardless of these pushbacks, native organizers and Floor Sport Texas are holding agency on their organizing efforts to decriminalize by way of citywide ballots — and have interaction voters by extension.
“It’s so extremely common and it’s going to get individuals out to vote,” Oliver mentioned. “That’s what we’d like in our state.”
Disclosure: Rice College has been a monetary supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan information group that’s funded partly by donations from members, foundations and company sponsors. Monetary supporters play no function within the Tribune’s journalism. Discover a full record of them right here.
Texas
Why Texas A&M’s Taurean York Has A Personal Vendetta vs. Texas Longhorns
There might not be two rosters in America that are more familiar with one another than that of the Texas Longhorns and Texas A&M Aggies.
Between the two programs, there are 161 players from the state of Texas – the vast majority of whom played against at least one or multiple players on the other side in high school previously.
And as if that didn’t make the competition fierce enough, the Longhorns and Aggies will be facing off for the first time in 13 years this Saturday, with each of those players hoping to leave their mark on the rivalry.
That includes Aggies star linebacker Taurean York, who holds a personal vendetta against the Longhorns and cannot wait to see them on the field.
“I wanted the A&M offer,” York said Monday. “(Texas) stayed 50 minutes away from me. They came on a helicopter to see my best friend. … They weren’t paying me much attention. I didn’t invest too much in those guys anyways.”
York signed with Texas A&M as a three-star recruit out of Temple (TX), originally committing to Baylor before the Aggies offered late in the process.
Meanwhile, the Longhorns didn’t even extend the now-Aggies captain an offer, instead choosing to sign five other linebackers: five-star Anthony Hill, four-stars Derion Gullette, Leona Leafua, and Tasuli Akana, and three-star S’Maje Burrell.
And as York said over the summer, he took that personally.
“It’s personal, that’s all I have to say, it’s personal,” York said at SEC Media Days. “I don’t talk to anybody from Texas because it’s that personal to me. They didn’t recruit me and there are a lot of comparisons going on about me and Texas players. So I kinda put those rest in a sense.”
To be fair, the Longhorns hardly made a bad choice in the players they signed. Hill is arguably the best linebacker in the SEC, while Lefau is a key contributor and rising star on the defense. Not to mention, the Longhorns have high hopes for Akana and Gullette in the future.
In fact, only Burrell proved to be a bad investment by the Horns, after he was involved in an offseason drunk driving incident with former Longhorn T’Vondre Sweat, and was dismissed from the team.
Either way, York will now finally get his chance to face Texas on the field and prove why he believes they did make a mistake by not recruiting him during the 2023 cycle.
Kick off is set for 6:30 pm CT on ABC, with York hoping the Longhorns continue their trend of receiving the opening kick.
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Aggie Gameday Extra Podcast: Can Texas A&M renew the rivalry with a win over Texas?
Saturday marks a game 13 years in the making. Texas A&M and Texas return to a rivalry football game, now that both teams are in the Southeastern Conference. Beyond that, both teams are playing for a berth into the SEC Championship and the College Football Playoff. KBTX senior A&M sportswriter Travis L. Brown, along with chief meteorologist Max Crawford and sports director Tyler Shaw break down A&M’s chances at coming out of Kyle Field with a win.
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