Oppose Increased Policing and Fining of Mushrooms in Connecticut
Bay Staters is a Grassroot, People-Powered Movement for Justice!
Founded in early 2021, Bay Staters for Natural Medicine (baystatersnm.org, @baystaters) is a grassroots community network of volunteers from all walks of life—including veterans, doctors, nurses, addiction treatment workers, and ordinary people. With zero dollars fundraised, it has worked with the city councils of four communities—Somerville, Cambridge, Northampton, Easthampton, Amherst, and Salem, Provincetown, Medford, and soon New Haven CT—to secure unanimous votes making arrests for all drug possession and arrests for growing psychedelic plants the lowest priority for law enforcement.
The community group has achieved this work through community events (where we teach growing, foraging, trip sitting, and meditation: RSVP here).

Why Connecticut's Bill Will Intensify the Drug War
2. Does not Protect Growers — People often do not look past headlines, and case-in-point is how much this Connecticut bill has been promoted as "decriminalization" without mentioning fines. While the bill might result in increased or more public discussion of psilocybin, it does absolutely nothing to protect people supplying psilocybin to their friends and family. People caught "manufacturing" a controlled substance like psilocybin can face up to fifteen years in jail and may be fined up to $50,000. This means, inevitably, that by only taking a very small step in the right direction this law could end up destroying the lives of people who chose to grow their own and share if they encounter an undercover narcotics officer whose department has a new financial incentive to fine people. A lot of people will not understand what "decriminalization" is and have their lives destroyed.
3. Placates Activists in the Space while still Labeling Psilocybin as Something Bad — be careful what you wish for in supporting legislation because once lawmakers pass something small, they will often use it as an excuse not to take further action for years or even decades into the future. This legislation allows them to signal that psilocybin is still something worthy of steep fines and punishment (particularly people growing and sharing it) while making some of the people making demands on them buzz off. For these reasons, we are calling on people who care about access to plant medicine in Connecticut to fight for a better bill next session and instead put efforts that would have gone into community events and city-based decriminalization efforts. Headlines are not progress. Policy and community change matter. And passing Connecticut's bill would create a terrible precedent for the entire region.
What is the Alternative We Propose? An Act Relative to Plant Medicine
Decriminalizes two grams of every psychedelic plant
This has two primary benefits. The first is that two grams of psilocybin or psilocin, independent of the organic matter of the fungi that contain them, is the equivalent of nearly 150 grams of dried mushrooms. That's a pretty reasonable amount for a person to have in the comfort of their own home at any given time to use over a lifetime or share. This means that these plant alternatives will be reasonably accessible for people to access on a community level without thousands of pages of regulation that seek to given profit-driven actors like Field Trip in Oregon the ability to charge thousands of dollars for an experience to desperate people.
The Benefits of Psychedelics Plants
A Revolution in Mental Health and Addiction
A meta-analysis from two decades of clinical trials found these plants to have substantial effects for treating depression and PTSD (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32529966/). And a 2020 study in the Journal of the American Medical Association demonstrated that psilocybin therapy puts major depression in remission for one in two sufferers. Clinical trials have shown plant medicines like ayahuasca and ibogaine to be some of the most effective treatments for alcoholism and opioid addiction.
This bill will ripple throughout the world since our Commonwealth is the biomedical capital of the world, creating momentum for international change that is years in the making. If we wait, indigenous healers, therapists, and treatment centers will be forced to continue their operation in fear and stigma. This is what Big Pharma and Billionaire Peter Thiel want to increase their market share: in the years to come, we will decide if want healers to be forced to buy the artificial psychedelics at inflated prices from pharmaceutical companies or allow adults to grow and use them in peace as they have for thousands of years. A legal treatment that could cost $100 (or free for people in need) will instead cost nearly $15,000 if these corporations have their way.
* Opioid Overdoses: In the month of May alone, nearly 170 of our friends, family members, and neighbors in Massachusetts lost their lives to opioid overdoses. A 2017 study of 44,000 Americans found that psychedelic use is associated with a 40% reduced risk of opioid abuse.
* Depression and Trauma: Massachusetts millennials have the highest rates of depression for their age group in the United States, and nearly one in five residents regardless of age suffer from depression. Naturally occurring plants and fungi, like psilocybin mushrooms, have been designated "breakthrough therapies" by the FDA for their substantial benefits in major depressive disorder.
A November 2020 study in the Journal of the American Medical Association found one in two patients put their major depression in remission after only two psilocybin therapy sessions, making it four times more effective than standard depression medications. A 2020 meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials dating back almost two decades found that psychedelic-assisted therapy is substantially effective in treating PTSD, depression, anxiety linked to terminal illness, and social anxiety linked to autism. Other studies confirm this result, finding that entheogens substantially reduce psychological distress and suicidal planning and ideation.
* Smoking: Smoking kills one in five of our friends, family members, and neighbors in Massachusetts. Apart from premature deaths and quality of life implications, smoking also cost our state hundreds of millions of dollars in Medicaid expenses every year. A 2017 study by Johns Hopkins medical faculty found that smoking patients achieved an 80% abstinence rate over six months with psilocybin mushroom assisted therapy—a 45% higher success rate than the most effective smoking cessation drug. Similarly, research suggests potential benefits for treating alcoholism.
* Cluster Headaches: Some Massachusetts residents suffer from cluster headaches, an extremely debilitating condition. A study by the American Academy of Neurology interviewed patients who tried psilocybin in the absence of any known cure. Five in seven reported psilocybin ended the headaches and one in two reported a complete termination of the ailment.