This paper presents results of a telephone survey of 400 Western Austr
alians regarding attitudes to laws relating to possession of cannabis
for personal use. Over a third of respondents believed cannabis should
be made as legal as alcohol. Support for decriminalization increased
from 64.0% to 71.5% when possible penalties associated with decriminal
ization were described. When penalties were described more women than
men favored decriminalization but age, political affiliation, and city
or country residency no longer predicted attitudes to decriminalizati
on. Almost two-thirds of respondents believed that many people used ca
nnabis without experiencing serious problems and that the court system
war overburdened by minor cannabis offenses. Half the sample believed
it would not be a bad thing for the community if people were legally
able to grow cannabis for their personal use. Results suggest there is
considerable community support for removing criminal penalties for si
mple cannabis offenses.