The Latest on Marijuana Laws in Amsterdam

Nurseries promise you can take most of their seeds back into the USA. An exception is this marijuana starter kit.

Dutch pot smokers are complaining that the generation that was running naked on acid around Amsterdam’s Vondelpark during the Sixties is now threatening the well-established, regulated marijuana trade in the Netherlands.

Responding to international pressure and conservatives in rural and small-town Holland, the federal government is cracking down on coffeeshops (which legally sell marijuana). But big-city mayors, like Amsterdam’s, will fight to keep them open. Amsterdam’s leaders recognize that legalized marijuana and the Red Light District’s prostitution are part of the edgy charm of the city; the mayor wants to keep both, but get rid of the accompanying sleaze. The Dutch have learned that when sex and soft drugs are sold on the street (rather than legally), you get pimps, gangs, disease, hard drugs, and violence. Amsterdam recognizes the pragmatic wisdom of its progressive policies and is bucking the federal shift to the right. Locals don’t want shady people pushing drugs in dark alleys; they’d rather see marijuana sold in regulated shops.

While in Amsterdam, I took a short break from my guidebook research to get up-to-speed on the local drug policy scene. I find this especially interesting this year, as I’m co-sponsoring Initiative 502 in Washington State, which is on track to legalize, tax, and regulate the sale of marijuana for adults (on the ballot this November).

The Netherlands’ neighboring countries (France and Germany) are complaining that their citizens simply make drug runs across the border and come home with lots of pot. To cut back on this, border towns have implemented a “weed pass” system, where pot is sold only to Dutch people who are registered. But the independent-minded Dutch (especially young people) don’t want to be registered as pot users, so they are buying it on the street — which is rekindling the black market, and will likely translate to more violence, turf wars, and hard drugs being sold. The next step: In January of 2013, this same law will come into effect nationwide — including in Amsterdam, whose many coffeeshops will no longer be allowed to legally sell marijuana to tourists.

Locals point out that the Dutch are not more “pro-drugs” than other nations. For example, my Dutch friends note that, while the last 20 years of US Presidents (Clinton, Bush, Obama) have admitted or implied that they’ve smoked marijuana, no Dutch prime minister ever has. Many Dutch people are actually very anti-drugs. The Dutch word for addiction is “enslavement.” But the Dutch response to the problem of addiction is very different from that of the US.

Being a port city, Amsterdam has had its difficult times with drug problems. In the 1970s, thousands of hard-drug addicts made Amsterdam’s old sailor quarter, Zeedijk, a no-go zone. It was nicknamed “Heroin Alley.” To fight it, they set up coffeeshop laws (allowing for the consumption of pot while cracking down on hard-drug use). Today Zeedijk is gentrified, there’s no sense of the old days, and various studies indicate that Holland has fewer hard-drug users, per capita, than many other parts of Europe.

From the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s, the number of coffeeshops exploded. The Dutch observed that marijuana use rates increased, too, so they made changes, closing shops that ignored rules or generated neighborhood complaints. Now, new coffeeshop licenses are no longer being issued, and the number of coffeeshops in Amsterdam has declined from a peak of over 700 to about 200 today. With the movement afoot to crack down on things, coffeeshops are trying harder than ever to be good citizens and to nurture good relations with their neighbors.

While most Americans like their joints made purely of marijuana, the Dutch (like most Europeans) are accustomed to mixing tobacco with marijuana. There are several reasons: Back in the 1970s, most “pot smokers” here smoked hash, which needs to be mixed with something else (like tobacco) to light up. Today, more Dutch prefer “herbal cannabis” — the marijuana bud common in the US — but they still keep the familiar tobacco in their joints. Tobacco-mixed joints also go back to hippie days, when pot was expensive and it was simply wasteful to pass around a pure marijuana joint. Mixing in tobacco allowed poor hippies to be generous without going broke. And, finally, the Dutch don’t dry and cure their marijuana, so it’s simply hard to smoke without tobacco. Any place that caters to Americans will have joints without tobacco, but you have to ask specifically for a “pure” joint. Joints are generally sold individually (for €3 to €5, depending on the strain you choose).

Coffeeshops are allowed only half a kilo (about a pound) of pot in their inventory at any given time. On a typical day, a busy shop will sell three kilos (and, therefore, take six deliveries). Very little marijuana is imported anymore, as the technology is such that strains from all over the world can be grown in local greenhouses. (And the Dutch wrote the book on greenhouses.) “Netherlands weed” is now refined, like wine.

The Dutch hemp heritage goes way back in this sailing culture. In the days of Henry Hudson, hemp was critical for quality rope and for sails. The word “canvas” comes from the same root as “cannabis.” In fact, there was a time when tobacco was the pricey leaf, and sailors mixed hemp into their cigarettes to stretch their tobacco.

Tourists who haven’t smoked since they were students are famous for overdosing in Amsterdam, where they can suddenly light up without any paranoia. Coffeeshop baristas nickname tourists about to pass out “Whitey” — because of the color their face turns just before they hit the floor. The key is to eat or drink something sweet to stop from getting sick. Coca-Cola is a good fast fix, and coffeeshops keep sugar tablets handy.

No one would say smoking pot is healthy. It’s a drug. It’s dangerous, and it can be abused. The Dutch are simply a fascinating example of how a society can allow marijuana’s responsible adult use as a civil liberty, and treat its abuse as a health-care and education challenge rather than a criminal issue. They have a 25-year track record of not arresting pot smokers, and have learned that if you want to control a substance, the worst way to do it is to keep it illegal. Regulations are strictly enforced. While the sale of marijuana is allowed, advertising is not. You’ll never see any promotions or advertising in windows. In fact, in many places, the prospective customer has to take the initiative and push a button to illuminate the menu in order to know what’s for sale. And, surprisingly, marijuana is just not a big deal in the Netherlands — except to tourists coming from lands where you can do hard time for lighting up. A variety of studies have demonstrated that the Dutch smoke less than the European average — and fewer than half as many Dutch smoke pot, per capita, as Americans do.

Comments

14 Replies to “The Latest on Marijuana Laws in Amsterdam”

  1. The problem is “not in my backyard”, this is all good until this is literally in your backyard. Right behind the fence in my beautiful backyard (swimming pool and all) where my grandkids swim all summer, this year has been rented out to a huge pot grow sponsered by a women out of Los Angeles. I live in Northern Calif. Of course the neighborhood is upset and keeping fingers crossed that violence doesn’t break out when harvest time comes. We are just waiting to call the Sheriff if any shots are fired or arguments break out. Although a lot seems to go on at night. Not really sure where I am going with this, other than haven’t figured out what is good about any of this?????

  2. I lived in Maastricht and saw the druggies. yes at least half is out of country visitors but there are adicted kids as well. I personally have never tried marajuana. If you want to tax and regulate it ok but I will ask this. We have rules for alcohol and can test easily if one is drunk or over the limit. How will you test people for marajuana.
    How long after using it can your kid’s school bus driver wait before doing the rounds. how about your doctor or nurse, or your airline pilot. It won’t just be band members and artists smoking up. I am not saying it should be illegal but what will the regs and testing be for it?

  3. Tony I know for a fact that you cannot be a school bus driver (at least in California) with the use of any Marijuania. My husband manages the School bus Co here and they are randomly drug tested and even with a prescription you cannot obtain a license to drive a school bus ever.

  4. The Australian Police has for several years and now the British police are becoming equipped with roadside drug testing kits, basically it is similair to the drink breath testing kits used, except rather than analyse alcohol levels in the breath it analyse’s for drug trace on your breath.
    I have no doubt these kits will eventually be picked up by Continental European police forces.

  5. If I lived in Washington State I’d be voting for Initiative 502. You’d think Americans would have learned from Prohibition, but clearly not. Of course, the “war on drugs” helps feed the military machine.

  6. “Responding to international pressure and conservatives in rural and small-town Holland, the federal government is cracking down on coffeeshops (which legally sell marijuana).”

    Rick, take off your US-tinted glasses and you might want to question your sources on this statement. It’s the border cities like Maastricht, Tilburg, Breda, Venlo, Roosendaal, etc. that been the advocates of tightening restrictions, not some imaginary cabal of small town Dutch Tea Partiers. The cities are currently governed by parties from across the political spectrum, from the left-leaning PvDA, centrist VVA to center right CDA. Their objections are typically Dutch- not moralistic, but practical. Mainly, the problems of public nuisance created by the foreign “stoner trippers” in their cities and the organized crime networks that have used the legal cover of the current system to flourish and expand. And not all coffee shop owners have been as responsible as you claim, particularly those in the above-mentioned cities.

  7. Please tell us the m.j. use policy at ETBD. Is is different than what Rick Steve espouses for the rest of the U.S? Does it work? Is it, don’t ask, don’t tell?

  8. I am a Washington state resident that will be voting yes on the initiative. It is far, far past the time that we stop the insane waste of prosecuting marijuana users. We need our ever more limited tax dollars to prosecute crimes that actually harm persons and property.
    Dennis Patterson–Deer Park, WA

  9. It will be interesting to see Washington as a model state. See how life is really effected by the legalization. Will factories produce pot, like alcohol? Will people be willing to pay the taxes and high prices that go along with store fronts and businesses. Or will it be easier to grow your own? Or just steal it from your neighbor? These are all the questions I think have not been answered and haven’t been tried in this debate.

  10. @judy – Let’s see. How many people steal alcohol from their neighbors? How many moonshiners are still in operation? What makes you think a product is cheaper when it’s illegal? You sound so paranoid…

  11. Thanks AGAIN Rick for another thoughtful and introspective look at this issue. WHY are we not seeing the forest for the trees. Friend always…you have made the latter part of my life a most special place. And say hello to Alfio (from Sicily you know) and thank him for what he does as well.
    Take Care…and Happy Travels…I am trying to do October again like last year.
    Jerry

  12. This situation in amsterdam with Marijuhana remember me the same that occure in Spain with Bullfighting.

    There’s some tradition that we can change.

    KIM,

  13. This site won’t let me post links (!), but if you go to the New York Times website, and look in the book section, you’ll find an interesting review of ‘Too High to Fail,’ by Doug Fine.

    Quote: “… a well-researched book that uses the clever tactic of making the moral case for ending marijuana prohibition by burying it inside the economic case”

  14. It’s about time our leaders recognized that a lot of people like to get high on something other than alcohol. If our politicians really cared about keeping people safe then they would legalize every recreational drug that’s safer than booze.

    That would retain alcohol as the most harmful recreational drug legally available while at the same time give people the right to legally choose safer alternatives to alcohol.

    If our government really cares about keeping children safe then why is it bending over backwards to make them unsafe?

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