DENVER (CBS4) The results of a new study about the impact of Colorados marijuana legalization is raising troubling questions for parents. The study cites a significant increase in marijuana-related traffic deaths, hospital visits and school suspensions. The parents CBS4s Melissa Garcia spoke with say theyre concerned about their children seeing messages promoting pot all over town. Activists say its the way pot is marketed and sold that has started to create some serious problems.
I never dreamed in a million years that this would happen to my son, said parent Kendal, who didnt want to use his last name.
Kendal came home one evening to find his 13-year-old son unconscious from what he says was a marijuana overdose.
He was gray. His heart wasnt beating and he wasnt breathing, he said.
Kendal used CPR to resuscitate him and later talked to his sons high school peer and supplier.
I had heard from kids that there was 60 percent of this particular high school using drugs, and she shook her head and said, Thats way low,' Kendal said.
Kendals story breaks my heart, but Ive got to tell you we have heard that from hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of parents throughout the state, said Diane Carlson, Smart Colorado co-founder.
Carlson says Colorados child and teen use of marijuana has become an epidemic.
Kids have no idea how dangerous or harmful Colorados pot is, she said.
According to a report released this month by the Rocky Mountain High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area, Colorado saw a 29 percent increase in emergency room visits, and a 38 percent increase in hospitalizations during retail marijuanas first year.
The study states that over 11 percent of Colorados 12 to 17 year-olds use pot 56 percent higher than the national average. It also cites a 40 percent increase in drug-related suspensions and expulsions the vast majority from marijuana.
Carlson says the culprit is its commercialization.
Marijuana might have been legalized in our state; it did not have to mean massive commercialization and promotion of marijuana use, she said