Campus Cats:
The Kitty Workforce Committee cares for dozens of cats that call ARC home.
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Wednesday 02.14.18
CURRENT The
American River College Sacramento, Calif.
WEED LEGALIZED IN CALIFORNIA BUT STILL CRIMINALIZED ON COLLEGE CAMPUSES
Flu Season:
This year’s influenza strain has experts calling for people to get vaccinated.
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Vol. 69
Ed. 5
LRPD officer calls for backup after altercation with student By Luis Gael Jimenez luisgaeljimenez@gmail.com
Photo illustration by Ashley Hayes-Stone | Co-Managing Editor & Multimedia Editor
Los Rios Community College’s anti-drug rules are hard-set and could see students facing disciplinary action and/or legal consequences for violating them.
New marijuana laws don’t change Los Rios’ district-wide anti-drug regulations By Brienna Edwards & Luis Gael Jimenez briennaedwards@gmail.com luisgaeljimenez@gmail.com Larissa Lopez rolls out of bed, eyes bleary and heavy-lidded. She is tired and she is stressed; her mind is running a mile a minute and won’t slow down. She rubs her eyes, and stares at the floor for a long moment. Her alarm still blares in the background as she stumbles across the room. Lopez, a sociology major at American River College with a nutrition class looming at 9 a.m., has an assignment due and a lecture to sit though. It’s going to be a long day. Her morning routine is a blur of muscle memory. Still half-asleep, Lopez takes a deep-breath before she sits down and lights up a bowl — there’s nothing stopping her since recreational marijuana was legalized across the state on Jan. 1, 2018. She works at a dispensary so she knows it’s the good stuff — the best stuff. It’s not something she does everyday, but it’s something she’s done in the past when she knows she needs to concentrate.
She takes a long drag from the pipe, releases a cloud of smoke, and closes her eyes for a moment. Lopez can feel her mind easing, focusing. She opens her eyes and takes another hit, before she continues to prepare for the day with a newfound motivation. “Sometimes I’ll smoke before class, but if I’m going to smoke, I’m going to smoke a sativa — that’s something that stimulates your mind. It gets you focused on what you’re doing versus someone who comes in who just smoked an indica,” Lopez said. “That’s going to make them sleepy. It’s going to make them want food. It will help out their pain but it’s not really gonna make them like focus on attention and stuff; it’s gonna make them more groggy.” On Nov. 9 2016, Proposition 64, “The Adult Use of Marijuana Act” passed in the state of California legalizing the recreational use and growing of marijuana for personal use. In continuation of Prop. 64, the sales and taxation of cannabis across the state became legal on Jan. 1 of this year. That means that if you are 21 years of age or older, getting access to marijuana is as simple as finding a reputable, licensed dispensary near you.
Illustration by Brienna Edwards
American River College has banned the use of marijuana on campus but that hasn’t stopped students from using cannabis before classes.
This causes a controversy between those who have been smoking marijuana for medicinal purposes, and those who using the drug after its legalization. “Definitely like a whole new different type of people, in the sense that we have people who have never even stepped foot into a cannabis facility,” Lopez said. The ease of access has created a dilemma for the Los Rios Community College Administration and the Los Rios Police Department because, although weed is legal in the state of California, it is still illegal at the federal level. Gabe Ross, the Associate Vice Chancellor of Communications &
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Media Relations for Los Rios Community College, said the problem is one that is out of the hands of Los Rios officials. “There is really no change for Los Rios and [other] community colleges because marijuana, despite being legal in California, is still illegal by the federal government, “ Ross said. “We are governed by a federal law called the ‘Drug-Free School Act’ so there is really no change for our colleges.” The Drug-Free School and Communities Act requires schools to implement a drug prevention program in order to qualify to receive federal assistance. “At the end of the day federal law trumps everything else,” Ross told the Current. According to Ross, marijuana will be treated much like alcohol has always been treated by school officials: as something that only exists off-campus and is heavily restricted within school grounds. The California Health and Safety Code also restricts the use of marijuana to private property and state-licensed premises. The law bans the consumption of marijuana within a thousand feet of a school, daycare or youth center — ARC serves as both a school and a daycare. Weed | Page 2
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REPUBLIC FC Sacramento Republic FC wins
PAGE 4 preseason opener at ARC against Sacramento Gold FC.
Sacramento Sheriff’s deputies responded to a call for backup from a Los Rios Police Department Officer on Feb. 6 after an apparent altercation with an American River College student inside the Disabled Student Programs and Services Offices. According to ARC Public Information Officer Scott Crow, there is still an ongoing investigation as to the nature of the incident but dispatchers at the Sheriff’s office were able to confirm that a call for backup was placed and several officers in the area responded at 1:20 p.m. One individual was arrested, according to the sheriff’s office dispatcher. The Visitor’s Parking lot on the west side of the campus was closed down temporarily because of the large amount of responding officers from the Sheriff’s Department, the California Highway Patrol and the LRPD. In an email to the Current, Crow said that the call for backup is not unusual in situations like this. “A Los Rios Police Department officer did request backup, which is often a standard procedure with law enforcement. The outside agencies were on campus for a few minutes before being released,” Crow said. “I do not have all of the details on the situation as it is still early stages. That is what we know at this time.” The incident was originally categorized as an Emergency Response Notification Icon alarm call on the Los Rios Police Department Crime Log but has since been changed to reclassify the event as involving a “Mentally Unstable Person” on campus. The ERNI alarm is installed on administrative computers across the district and acts as a silent alarm system that administrators can trigger in the event of an emergency. The ERNI alarm was triggered from an administrator’s computer inside the DSP&S Office. DSP&S Supervisor Fong Vang was able to confirm that the ERNI alarm system was used because of an incident but said he was unable to provide further details at that time. The call for backup was broadcast across the dispatch channel shared between the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office and Sacramento City Police. This article will be updated online as more information becomes available.