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(POLL) If it were legal would you blaze it up?

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(From Salinapost.com) Catharine Leach is married and has two boys, age 2 and 8. She has a good job with a federal contractor and smokes pot most every day.

While she worries that her public support for marijuana decriminalization and legalization could cost her a job or bring the police to her door, the 30-year-old Warwick resident said she was tired of feeling like a criminal for using a drug that she said is far less harmful than the glass of wine or can of beer enjoyed by so many others after a long day’s work. Like others around the nation working to relax penalties for possession of pot, she decided to stop hiding and speak out.

“I’m done being afraid,” she said. “People in this country are finally coming around and seeing that putting someone in jail for this doesn’t make sense. It’s just a changing of the time.”

Once consigned to the political fringe, marijuana policy is appearing on legislative agendas around the country thanks to an energized base of supporters and an increasingly open-minded public. Lawmakers from Rhode Island to Colorado are mulling medical marijuana programs, pot dispensaries, decriminalization and even legalization. Seventeen states and the District of Columbia now authorize medical marijuana and 14, including neighboring Connecticut and Massachusetts, have rolled back criminal penalties for possession of small amounts of pot.

Rhode Island is poised to become the 15th state to decriminalize marijuana possession. The state’s General Assembly passed legislation last week that would eliminate the threat of big fines or even jail time for the possession of an ounce or less of pot. Instead, adults caught with small amounts of marijuana would face a $150 civil fine. Police would confiscate the marijuana, but the incident would not appear on a person’s criminal record.

Minors caught with pot would also have to complete a drug awareness program and community service.

Gov. Lincoln Chafee has said he is inclined to sign the legislation.

One of the bill’s sponsors, state Rep. John Edwards of Tiverton, has introduced similar proposals in past years but the idea always sputtered in committee. Each year, though, he got more co-sponsors, and the bill passed the House this year 50-24. The state Senate passed it 28-6.

Some supporters of decriminalization say they’d like to go even further.

“America’s 50-year war on drugs has been an abysmal failure,” said Rep. John Savage, a retired school principal from East Providence. “Marijuana in this country should be legalized. It should be sold and taxed.”

Opponents warned of dire consequences to the new policy.

“What kind of message are we sending to our youth? We are more worried about soda – for health reasons – than we are about marijuana,” said one opponent, Rhode Island state Rep. John Carnevale a Democrat from Providence.

A survey by Rasmussen last month found that 56 percent of respondents favored legalizing and regulating marijuana. A national Gallup poll last year showed support for legalizing pot had reached 50 percent, up from 46 percent in 2010 and 25 percent in the mid-’90s.

Medical marijuana helped bring marijuana policy into the mainstream back in 1996, when California became the first state to authorize the use of cannabis for medicinal use. Other states followed suit.

“It’s now politically viable to talk about these things,” said Robert Capecchi, legislative analyst with the Marijuana Policy Project, a Washington, D.C.-based group that supports the reduction or elimination of penalties for medical and recreational pot use. “The public understands that there are substances that are far more harmful – alcohol, tobacco – that we regulate. People are realizing just how much money is being wasted on prohibition.”

Colorado and Washington state will hold fall referendums on legalizing marijuana. A ballot question on legalization failed in California in 2010.

This month, Connecticut’s governor signed legislation to allow medical marijuana there. Last week, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo proposed cutting the penalty for public possession of small amounts of pot.

Liberal state policies on marijuana have run into conflict with federal prohibition. Federal authorities have shut down more than 40 dispensaries this year in Colorado, even though they complied with state and local law.

(UPDATED) Scottsbluff Police ID man killed by train

Authorities in Western Nebraska have identified the Scottsbluff man who died Friday when he was struck by a freight train.

A Scottsbluff news outlet reports 20-year-old Christopher Wadding was hit by a westbound Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad train around 3 a.m. Friday.

Police Capt. Brian Wasson says Wadding had been lying on the tracks before the accident.

Fingerprints were used to identify Wadding after family members told police that he hadn’t been seen since about an hour before the crash.

Wasson says there is no evidence of foul play, and Wadding’s family members did not believe he was suicidal.

Toxicology tests were performed, and the results are pending.

Female inmate dies at Nebraska DOC

YORK, Neb. (AP) — An inmate at the Nebraska Correctional Center for Women in York died recently at a Lincoln hospital.

A York news outlet reports that 36-year-old Amy Katzberg died Wednesday. Assistant Warden Tim Siemek confirmed the death on Friday.

Siemek says Katzberg had been receiving medical treatment in Lincoln since May 16 for an unnamed medical condition.

Katzberg was serving a sentence of four to 10 years for felony theft in Lancaster County. She had been incarcerated since November 2010.

A grand jury will be called to investigate Katzberg’s death because she died in state custody.

(VIDEO) Dr. Tom Pratt speaks about the Rotary Chili Cookoff

The Rotary Chili Cook Off is happening this morning at Wild West Arena.. Admission is just $7.00 for adults..

Dr. Tom Pratt from Pratt Dental speaks about how the Chili Cook Off benefits North Platte.

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North Platte Post News Director and Minnesota native Kris Allen sneaks in an exclusive interview with Lil Red… Lil red proved to be more of an exciting interview than the Vikings mascot..

Lincoln toddler expected to be OK after hit by mothers car

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A Lincoln toddler who suffered life-threatening injuries when she was hit by her mother’s car is expected to survive.

Jim Schmersal told the Lincoln Journal Star (https://bit.ly/LCBgXM ) that his 21-month-old granddaughter, Aubree Cummins, suffered a bruised lung, lacerated liver and skull fracture in Wednesday’s accident but she’s going to be OK. She’s in an Omaha hospital.

Schmersal says Aubree was hit by the car and dragged down the driveway as her mother, Jami Marcano, rushed to a baseball game. He says Marcano put Aubree in the car and went back inside for a moment, during which Aubree got out of the vehicle. When Marcano got behind the wheel, Schmersal says, she didn’t realize Aubree had gotten out of the car and struck her.

One dead in ATV crash in NE Nebraska

NEWCASTLE, Neb. (AP) — One person has died and another has been injured in an ATV crash in rural Newcastle.

The Dixon County sheriff’s office told a Lincoln media outlet that 34-year-old Melissa Brown died at the scene of the crash, which was reported just before midnight Friday.

The sheriff’s office says 36-year-old Clinton Brown was taken to a Sioux City, Iowa, hospital for treatment of injuries.

Details of the crash have not been released.

Wildfire near Fort Collins has consumed over 5000 acres…

Smoke from the fire at Fort Collins drifts from the SW to the NE into the Panhandle of Nebraska. Photo from NWS via Facebook
FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) — Crews are battling a wildfire in northern Colorado that has scorched 5,000 acres and prompted several dozen evacuation orders.

Larimer County Sheriff’s spokesman John Schulz says the fire was reported just before 6 a.m. Saturday in the Paradise Park area. He says at least 46 structures and likely many more have been evacuated, and an evacuation center has been set up at a middle school in Laporte.

Ten structures have been damaged, although authorities were unsure if they were homes or some other kind of buildings.

A sheriff’s statement says two heavy air tankers, five single-engine air tankers and four helicopters are on the scene.

The fire appears to be burning on private and U.S. Forest Service land.

Nebraskaland Days Kicks off to a fantastic start!

NORTH PLATTE (North Platte Post) – With a clear sky over head, food vendors set up, and plenty of sun screen Nebraskaland Days opens up with a bang at the Lincoln County Historical Museum! The opening ceremony was accompanied by Miss Nebraska Kayla Batt, as the National Anthem was sung on stage followed by an Auction.

At the Lincoln County Historical Museum family and friends walked the roads seeing the area filled with life! The buildings were opened and you can see all the historical buildings insides. Fun was to be had and sights to see!

(Only in Oregon) Woman arrested for visiting man through suitcase

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Police say a 50-year-old Oregon woman is in trouble because of her relationship baggage — but it’s not the emotional kind.

Kola J. McGrath was arrested Monday for trespassing after workers at her boyfriend’s downtown Portland apartment complex discovered the man was sneaking her into the building by hiding her in a large rolling suitcase. She was banned from the building last year for breaking a fire extinguisher case during an argument.

A Portland Oregon Newspaper McGrath is 5 feet, 6 inches tall and weighs 96 pounds.

Police were notified when a caller reported a man had kidnapped a woman, placed her in a pink suitcase and taken her to the apartment building.

Officers then searched 52-year-old Curtis T. Lowe’s apartment and found McGrath hiding in a closet.

33 mile detour planned for construction on 1 mile of highway.. Genius…

BLUE HILL, Neb. (AP) — A 33-mile-long detour has been arranged to handle traffic diverted from a road work on a mile of Nebraska Highway 4 in south-central Nebraska.

The Hastings Tribune says the work will begin Monday on the mile running east from the Highway 4 junction with U.S. Highway 281.

The Nebraska Roads Department says the roadway will be repaved and new lighting and guardrails will be installed. The project is expected to be finished in mid-September.

The detour includes stretches of U.S. Highway 281, U.S. Highway 136 and Nebraska Highway 78.

Project manager Lyle Kohmetscher says the long detour is needed because the area has so few paved roads, which are required for truck traffic.

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