Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In
Streetsblog

How One Arizona Town Is Encouraging People to Get High and Drive

Medical marijuana may get a new adherent this November in the state of Arizona, one of a handful of states where voters will consider lifting restrictions on the widely used drug.

Of course, not everyone is happy about the change. Hoping to get a step ahead of marijuana dispensaries, the local government in Oro Valley has adopted legislation that would forbid these establishments within 1,000 feet of any library, church, child-care facility, and park. The legislation, in effect, would make it nearly impossible to open a dispensary within the Tuscon suburb.

false

Local officials are obviously trying to be vigilant, but they might be inadvertently setting up a dangerous situation on local roadways, says Erik Ryberg at Tuscon Bike Lawyer:

I am sure the town fathers are proudly patting themselves on the back over their clever application of zoning laws to keep Oro Valley free of dope. But the thing I’ve noticed about marijuana is that it does not produce the same kinds of dumb-ass, testosterone-fueled violence and uproar that, say, alcohol does. I can actually only think of one thing that makes marijuana dangerous, which is when you smoke it and then get behind the wheel of a car.

Which is, of course, the one thing the Town of Oro Valley is going to encourage by this ill-thought ordinance. They are going to protect themselves from all the things that marijuana doesn’t do — create a danger to churches, parks, libraries, and child-care centers that are within 1000 feet of a dispensary — and they are going to increase the danger that marijuana already poses, by making people drive to Tucson for their prescription.

And let’s not fool ourselves: a large portion of those people are going to light up and drive home. Who are they most likely to hit on the way home? I’d say that would be us — bicyclists and pedestrians.

This is a serious concern, Ryberg notes. Tuscon lost a cyclist -- teacher and father Charles Nystrom -- to a motorist under the influence of marijuana just two years ago.

Elsewhere on the Network today: Soap Box LA discusses the finer points of jaywalking laws, following the death of a 16-year-old pedestrian in Los Angeles. Cap'n Transit delves into the Dukakis Center's recent study on transit investments and gentrification. And Grist asks whether we should be concerned that the Livable Communities Act is all carrot and no stick.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Q&A: Will The Bronx’s New Council Member Take On Car Culture?

Union leader Shirley Aldebol took on Republican Kristy Marmorato and won — and now she's ready to fight for better transit and safer streets.

November 7, 2025

Friday Video: The Utopia of London’s Low-Traffic Neighborhoods

Streetsfilms follows an urban planner around the “low-traffic neighborhood” of St. Peter’s in the London borough of Islington.

November 7, 2025

Friday’s Headlines: Movie Night Edition

Check out the Bike Film Festival this weekend. Plus other news.

November 7, 2025

SLAUGHTER: Wrong-Way Van Driver Kills Woman in West Village Crosswalk

The driver of a commercial van struck and killed a woman in her 20s as he drove the wrong way on Morton Street.

November 6, 2025

DECISION 2025: Transit Wins Big — Again — Across America

Several candidates who ran on ambitious transportation reform platforms won at the ballot box on Tuesday — but even more communities said yes to supporting transit directly.

November 6, 2025

Book Excerpt Special: The Incomplete Freeway Revolt

A new book looks at the destructive 20th-century urban development style — freeways, downtown office towers, suburban housing developments — that keeps Americans so dependent on their cars. Here's an excerpt.

November 6, 2025
See all posts