May 8, 2017

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C a l P o l y, S a n L u i s O b i s p o

E s t a b l i s h e d 1916

Marijuana and Cal Poly A before and after look at campus under Prop 64 CAMPUS CANNABIS

MAT T L AL ANNE | MUSTA NG NE W S

| With the legalization of marijuana in California, the University Police Department believes that there will be an increase in possession at Cal Poly if dispensaries begin opening in 2018.

Erica Hudson Special to Mustang News

As a federally-funded institution, using or possessing marijuana is prohibited at Cal Poly. Possession rates have declined on campus since 2014. However, now that recreational marijuana is legal in California, University Police Department (UPD) Chief George Hughes expects an uptick in possession if dispensaries begin opening in 2018.

Marijuana at Cal Poly In the past 10 years, the highest number of marijuana-related campus violations was in 2014. That year, there were 47 on-campus and five off-campus cases of possession of less than an ounce of marijuana. In addition, there were two possessions of concentrated cannabis and 207 other cannabisrelated violations. Since then, the number of other cannabis violations has decreased nearly 18 percent

with 165 violations reported in 2016. So far this year, five narcotic citations have been issued with 51 total calls for service. It is unclear how many of those are marijuana-related, according to Hughes. For the category of reports classified as ‘other cannabis violations,’ Hughes stated that the total reports can account for various violations. Anything from complaints filed for smelling marijuana to

students being caught smoking on campus property is included in this category. UPD doesn’t respond for service calls in the city, but California Education Code Section 89560 allows UPD officers jurisdiction within a mile radius around campus, which is accounted for in offcampus violations. Explaining changes in state law Under Proposition 64, adults

over 21 are able to possess and use recreational marijuana in private homes or businesses licensed for marijuana consumption on-site. Individuals can possess less than an ounce of marijuana and less than eight grams of concentrated marijuana and can cultivate up to six plants per household. MARIJUANA continued on page 2

Eight upcoming festivals to check out Carly Quinn @ carlyquinnMN

While pictures of Coachella Music and Arts Festival flooded Instagram feeds, the Electric Daisy Carnival line-up was released and tickets to Outside Lands were sold, several other smaller festivals were preparing for a summer of music.

EXECUTIVE ORDER

If these big-name festivals are too crowded and expensive, there are plenty of others happening this summer and fall. They’re intimate, unique and cheaper than the mainstream must-go festivals. There’s one for just about any music lover. FESTIVALS continued on page 5

MEGAN SCHELLONG | MUSTA NG NE W S

| President Trumps’ executive order may allow offshore oil and gas drilling in areas along the Atlantic and Artic Oceans.

Central Coast not named in offshore drilling executive order Megan Schellong @meganschellong

President Donald Trump signed an executive order on April 28 that would allow for the expansion of offshore oil and gas drilling along portions of the Atlantic and Arctic Oceans, but does not explicitly mention the Central Coast. The executive order, “America-First Offshore Energy Strategy,” was proposed to reduce the amount of oil imported from

overseas and to increase economic growth in the United States. “I think it’s putting America last when you consider that the world is moving forward with exploring new renewable energy sources,” Rep. Salud Carbajal said. The order will undo former President Barack Obama’s plan to prohibit offshore drilling off the coasts of the Atlantic and Arctic Oceans and California coast from 2017 to 2022.

“I don’t enjoy going down to the Santa Barbara Channel and looking at a bunch of rigs in the ocean,” Dean Wendt, Cal Poly’s director of the Center for Coastal Marine Sciences, said. “There’s a huge aesthetic impact that happens when we build these rigs. They call it the ‘view shed’ and that alters peoples’ experiences with [the] coastline as well.” Concerns surrounding offshore drilling often stem from previous offshore drilling-related

incidents. For example in 1969, nearly three million gallons of oil spilled into Santa Barbara’s oceans, enough to fill four and a half Olympic-sized swimming pools. Union Oil, the company responsible for the rig, built a barrier around the drilling hole that was 61 feet short of the federal requirements at the time, the Los Angeles Times reported. DRILLING continued on page 3

SOPHIA O’KEEFE | MUSTA NG NE W S

OPTIONS | There are many festivals smaller and cheaper than Coachella.

News 1-3 | Arts 4-5 | Opinion 6 | Classifieds 7 | Sports 8


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