Tag: Kamala Harris

  • Kamala Harris Unveils Mental Health Plan With Charlamagne Tha God

    Kamala Harris Unveils Mental Health Plan With Charlamagne Tha God

    Harris calls for more treatment beds, an end to solitary confinement, and increased access to mental health treatment in her newly released plan.

    Senator Kamala Harris unveiled her new mental health plan in South Carolina this week during an event featuring radio personality/author Charlamagne tha God. Harris sat down with The Breakfast Club host to discuss the state of mental health in America.  

    A Public Policy Failure

    “Probably one of the biggest public policy failures of America is the failure to address mental health and put the resources into it as a priority. The result of that is that people are silently suffering who should never suffer. We have so many children who are experiencing undiagnosed, untreated trauma, whether it is because they’re growing up in a home where there’s violence, which crosses socioeconomic lines, or a community where there’s violence, or growing up in poverty because — let’s be clear — poverty is trauma-inducing,” Harris explained, according to Post and Courier. “All of the behaviors that result from that undiagnosed, untreated trauma are predictable. We’re failing to address it and then where we do address it is in the criminal justice system. We have basically turned jails and prisons into these gigantic mental health facilities without any mental health treatment.”

    Charlamagne then touched on the issue of trauma and how he had to unlearn stigmatizing beliefs regarding who is affected by mental illness.

    “They call it a correctional facility, but what are you really correcting? You’re taking these kids who are already dealing with so much trauma and throwing them in a situation that’s just putting trauma on top of trauma, and then you’re letting them out in the world — if they are blessed enough to come home — and they haven’t dealt with anything,” he said. “I think one of the reasons they don’t get the help they need is because we don’t look at mental health services as something that should be part of a larger healthcare initiative. I didn’t even realize anxiety and depression was considered a mental health issue until I started going to therapy. When you think mental health, you think schizophrenia, you think somebody in a straitjacket, but no, it’s people dealing with these issues every single day and they just don’t have the proper tools and resources to go deal with it.”

    Harris added, “And then we deal with it when it reaches a crisis level. You would never say that we should have a health care system that only deals with stage four cancer.”

    In her new plan, Harris calls for an amendment to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) that would protect healthcare providers who give out patients’ private information if they are acting out of “good faith.”

    Disabled healthcare advocate Kendally Brown tweeted Harris in response to her proposed HIPAA amendments. “I adore you, but eliminating the IMD exclusion would remove the ONE protection mentally ill people have from the state locking them up in institutions long-term. I love that you’re focussing on mental health, but any solution MUST be community based, not institutional.”

    Brown’s stance is a common one among recovery and mental health advocates who fight for patients with addiction and/or mental health issues to make their own healthcare decisions.

    Kamala’s Mental Health Plan

    Here is Harris’s multi-pronged plan to address mental health, according to her campaign website:

    Focus Federal Funding on Needed Mental Health Research

    Kamala will direct federal funds to seek better treatment for mental illness and research on mental health issues more broadly, including research on adults with serious mental illness (SMI) and the use of interventions that reduce homelessness, arrest, incarceration, and unnecessary hospitalization.

    Expand Coverage of and Access to Mental Health Services

    Through her Medicare for All plan, Kamala will deliver mental health on demand via telemedicine, providing care by phone or video to all Americans whenever and wherever they need it—all without deductibles or copays.

    A shortage of mental health professionals harms American families and communities. It also drives provider stress and burnout. Kamala will authorize an educational loan forgiveness program for mental health professionals that agree to practice in areas with a shortage of providers.

    Increase Access to Hospitals, Housing, and Other Care Facilities

    Kamala will double the number of treatment beds nationwide, prioritizing states with shortages, including Iowa, Nevada, South Carolina, and Michigan, so persons with mental illness can receive the high levels of care they need.

    She’ll repeal the Institutions of Mental Disease (IMD) exclusion, which precludes Medicaid funding for adults receiving care in psychiatric facilities with more than 16 beds and has exacerbated a severe shortage of acute psychiatric care beds nationwide.

    Focus on Vulnerable Populations

    Double US Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs (VA) research dollars to address and treat PTSD, military sexual trauma, and traumatic brain injury.

    Invest in evidence-based screenings for childhood trauma—including the fact that poverty is trauma-inducing—to diagnose and treat mental illness as early as possible.

    End the Mental-Illness-to-Jail Pipeline

    Kamala will expand Crisis Intervention Team training, which integrates specialized police, mental health professionals, EMS, 911 systems, and hospital emergency rooms in response to mental health crisis calls.

    You can read more about Harris’s plan here.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Kamala Harris Introduces Comprehensive Marijuana Reform Bill

    Kamala Harris Introduces Comprehensive Marijuana Reform Bill

    “It is the most sweeping marijuana reform bill ever in Congress,” says the Drug Policy Alliance.

    New legislation introduced in Congress would decriminalize marijuana on the federal level and work toward dismantling years of damage inflicted by the decades-long “War on Drugs.”

    The Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement Act (MORE Act) was introduced in the Senate on Tuesday (July 23) by Senator Kamala Harris, with companion legislation sponsored by House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler in the House of Representatives, CNN reported.

    The bill is endorsed by major drug policy reformers including the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), the American Civil Liberties Union, and the Drug Policy Alliance.

    Inside The MORE Act

    “It is the most sweeping marijuana reform bill ever in Congress,” the DPA stated. “It would de-schedule marijuana at the federal level to let states set their own policies without interference and begin to repair the extensive damage done by prohibition.”

    The MORE Act would remove marijuana from Schedule I under the Controlled Substances Act, enacted in the 1970s. Under this designation, marijuana is defined by the federal government as a drug with no medical value and a high potential for abuse. Heroin, ecstasy and LSD also reside in the Schedule I category.

    By removing cannabis from Schedule I, each state will be given the opportunity to establish its own marijuana policy. And it would remove a major roadblock for marijuana research, which has been hindered by its Schedule I status for years.

    Three-Part Funding

    The bill would also channel tax revenue from the marijuana industry to go toward the three-part Opportunity Trust Fund, as outlined by the Daily Beast.

    The first part of the fund, the Community Reinvestment Grant, would provide job training, literacy programs, and re-entry services “for individuals most adversely impacted by the War on Drugs,” according to the bill’s text.

    The second, the Cannabis Opportunity Grant, would provide money to marijuana businesses owned by people who are economically and socially disadvantaged.

    And the third, the Equitable Licensing Grant, would reduce barriers to participating in the marijuana industry by, for example, waiving cannabis license application fees to people who live well below the Federal Poverty Level.

    “Times have changed—marijuana should not be a crime,” said Senator Harris, who is also a 2020 presidential hopeful, in a statement. “As marijuana becomes legal across the country, we must make sure everyone—especially communities of color that have been disproportionately impacted by the War on Drugs—has a real opportunity to participate in this growing industry.”

    Eleven states and the District of Columbia have passed legal recreational marijuana laws. And 33 states and D.C. have passed legal medical marijuana laws.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Kamala Harris Praises Illinois For Legalizing Marijuana

    Kamala Harris Praises Illinois For Legalizing Marijuana

    This is not the first time that Senator Harris (D-CA) has spoken out in favor of legalized cannabis.

    Democratic presidential hopeful, Senator Kamala Harris, took to Twitter this week to praise Illinois for legalizing marijuana and moving to expunge the records of people with marijuana-related criminal records. 

    “Thankful states like Illinois are stepping up to correct the mistakes of our past. It’s time to do the same at the federal level,” Harris wrote on Twitter

    Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker signed legislation this week that makes recreational cannabis legal for adults who are 21 or over. At the same time, the legislation will automatically expunge records for people who were caught with 30 grams of cannabis or less, while others with more serious offenses can petition the court for expungement. 

    Harris Talks Cannabis Reform In Her Book

    This is not the first time that Harris (D-CA) has spoken out in favor of legalized cannabis. In January she explicitly called for cannabis law reform in her book The Truths We Hold: An American Journey

    “Something else it’s past time we get done is dismantling the failed war on drugs—starting with legalizing marijuana,” she wrote. “We need to legalize marijuana and regulate it, and we need to expunge nonviolent marijuana-related offenses from the records of millions of people who have been arrested and incarcerated so they can get on with their lives.”

    More broadly, she wrote about drugs: “”We also need to stop treating drug addiction like a public safety crisis instead of what it is: a public health crisis. When someone is suffering from addiction, their situation is made worse, not better, by involvement in the criminal justice system.”

    Harris formerly worked as a prosecutor—as San Francisco’s district attorney and then attorney general of California—and has said that race undoubtedly plays a role in who is tried for marijuana crimes. 

    “The fact is marijuana laws are not applied and enforced the same way for all people. African-Americans use marijuana at roughly the same rate as whites, but are approximately four times more likely to be arrested for possession. That’s just not fair,” she has said in the past. 

    In addition, Harris has admitted that she smoked pot in the past.  

    “Look I joke about it, I have joked about it. Half my family is from Jamaica, are you kidding me?” she said in February. “I have had concerns, which I think—first of all, let me just make this statement very clear, I believe we need to legalize marijuana. Now, that being said… we need to research, which is one of the reasons we need to legalize it. We need to move it on the schedule so that we can research the impact of weed on a developing brain. You know, that part of the brain that develops judgment, actually begins its growth at age 18 through age 24.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Democrats Embrace Legalization In 2020 Primaries

    Democrats Embrace Legalization In 2020 Primaries

    A number of presidential hopefuls have been vocal about their experiences with marijuana and their desire to end its federal prohibition.

    Just a few election cycles ago, presidential candidates had to carefully craft their answers when asked whether they had ever tried marijuana. Heading into the 2020 campaign, however, many prominent Democratic candidates are vocally supporting marijuana legalization at the federal level. 

    Last week, U.S. Senator and presidential hopeful Cory Booker introduced legislation in the Senate that would legalize cannabis and expunge the records of people who have been convicted of federal marijuana-related expenses. Four other presidential candidates—Kamala Harris, Kirsten Gillibrand, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren—co-sponsored the bill. 

    The movement also has momentum outside Congress. Former Texas congressman and likely candidate Beto O’Rourke sent an email to supporters this week announcing his support for changes to federal marijuana policy, according to Reuters

    “We should end the federal prohibition on marijuana and expunge the records of those who were locked away for possessing it, ensuring that they can get work, finish their education, contribute to the greatness of this country,” O’Rourke wrote. 

    Senator Kamala Harris opposed an effort to legalize cannabis in California in 2010. (A later measure legalized recreational cannabis in the state.) However, she recently joked about marijuana use, riffing on President Bill Clinton’s infamous remark during the 1992 election that he had smoked marijuana, but did not inhale. 

    “I inhaled,” Harris said. “Half of my family’s from Jamaica. Are you kidding me?”

    Bernie Sanders has said that he tried cannabis, but didn’t like it and “nearly coughed my brains out.” He added, “It didn’t do a whole lot for me.”  

    Still, Sanders has been outspoken about the need to legalize cannabis. His home state of Vermont was the first in the nation to legalize cannabis through legislative action rather than a vote. 

    Too many lives are being destroyed. Hundreds of thousands of people get criminal records. You know why? Because they have smoked marijuana,” Sanders said this week. 

    Another candidate, former Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper, has been more cautious in his attitude toward marijuana reform. Despite the fact that he led a state that legalized marijuana early on, Hickenlooper has not called for federal legalization. However, he said that states should have the choice and federal banking laws need to change if that happens. 

    Polls show that most Americans—of both parties—favor legalizing cannabis. Among Democrats, three-quarters of voters feel that federal prohibition has to end. This cultural shift likely explains the enthusiasm from candidates, said Erik Altieri, executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML). 

    “The Democratic candidates are just acknowledging the practical and political reality—this is not only good policy, it’s good politics,” he said. 

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Kamala Harris Reveals She Smoked Pot In College

    Kamala Harris Reveals She Smoked Pot In College

    Harris discussed her stance on marijuana legalization and revealed a bit about her past use in a recent radio interview.

    Citing her Jamaican roots and past inhalation of pot, Kamala Harris firmly stated her support for the legalization of marijuana on a New York-based radio show, “The Breakfast Club.”

    While the bill S.420 to legalize marijuana was submitted to Congress just last week, the issue of marijuana’s legality is bigger than ever.  Harris, a former California attorney general and 2020 presidential contender, was speaking with the radio show’s co-host Charlamagne Tha God about the social issue of legalizing pot.

    When Charlamagne asked Harris if she’d ever smoked pot, Harris laughed and said yes, she had inhaled from a joint, and now was probably breaking news with the admission.

    Harris’ views on the legalization of marijuana have slowly altered since her vocal opposition in 2010. Five years and many studies and nationwide discussions later, Harris changed her position to one of support for medical use.

    CNN reports that in her interview with “The Breakfast Club,” she intimated support for recreational use of pot, citing “”that it gives a lot of people joy and we need more joy.”

    In Kamala Harris’ book The Truths We Hold: An American Journey, she moves beyond just legalization of the drug and calls for prison reform. “We need to legalize marijuana and regulate it, and we need to expunge nonviolent marijuana-related offenses from the records of millions of people who have been arrested and incarcerated so they can get on with their lives.”

    Answering the radio hosts about her position on the legalization of marijuana and if she opposes it, Harris was clear: “That’s not true. And look I joke about it, half joking—half my family’s from Jamaica, are you kidding me,” Harris laughed along with the radio hosts.

    “No, I do not—no, no,” Harris continued. “I have had concerns, the full record, I have had concerns, which I think—first of all, let me just make this statement very clear, I believe we need to legalize marijuana,” she said. “Now, that being said—and this is not a ‘but,’ it is an ‘and’—and we need to research, which is one of the reasons we need to legalize it. We need to move it on the schedule so that we can research the impact of weed on a developing brain. You know, that part of the brain that develops judgment, actually begins its growth at age 18 through age 24.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Kamala Harris Pushes For Marijuana Legalization In New Book

    Kamala Harris Pushes For Marijuana Legalization In New Book

    The California senator discusses her stance on prohibition, de-scheduling and the need for the war on drugs to be dismantled in her new book.

    More and more democratic politicians are getting on board with marijuana legalization, according to Forbes

    Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) is one of them, as she discusses the topic in her new book, The Truths We Hold: An American Journey.

    “Something else it’s past time we get done is dismantling the failed war on drugs—starting with legalizing marijuana,” Harris writes in the book. 

    “We need to legalize marijuana and regulate it,” she adds. “And we need to expunge nonviolent marijuana-related offenses from the records of millions of people who have been arrested and incarcerated so they can get on with their lives.”

    Though she is for marijuana legalization, Harris says that legalization should be done with caution. Because of the Schedule I status of the drug, she states, there has not been enough research on the effects. She also states that some solution needs to be put in place when it comes to driving under the influence of marijuana.

    Harris also touches on other drugs as a whole, writing, “”We also need to stop treating drug addiction like a public safety crisis instead of what it is: a public health crisis.” 

    “When someone is suffering from addiction, their situation is made worse, not better, by involvement in the criminal justice system,” she adds.

    Despite her support now, Harris has not always been supportive of marijuana legalization. According to Forbes, Harris laughed during a 2014 interview when a journalist raised a question about legalization.

    Two years later, in 2016, she also refused to support California’s cannabis legalization ballot measure. 

    However, with a possible presidential run on the horizon, Harris has gotten behind legalization. In May 2018, according to Forbes, Harris agreed to co-sponsor a bill that would remove marijuana from the Controlled Substances Act as well as withhold federal funding from states with “discriminatory cannabis enforcement.”

    “Right now in this country people are being arrested, being prosecuted, and end up spending time in jail or prison all because of their use of a drug that otherwise should be considered legal,” she said at that point.

    According to The Washington Examiner, at that time she also added that race plays a role when it comes to consequences of marijuana use.

    “It’s the smart thing to do. It’s the right thing to do. And I know this as a former prosecutor. I know it as a senator,” Harris said. “The fact is marijuana laws are not applied and enforced the same way for all people. African-Americans use marijuana at roughly the same rate as whites, but are approximately four times more likely to be arrested for possession. That’s just not fair.”

    View the original article at thefix.com