Marijuana legalization backers hand in initiative petitions
Supporters of
legalized marijuana announced today that they have gathered about 700,000
signatures for their initiative, virtually guaranteeing voters will see it on
the November ballot.
They plan to turn
in the petitions today to elections officials in some of the state's major
counties, including Los Angeles. Supporters need 433,971 valid signatures to
qualify the measure.
The measure’s main
proponent, Richard Lee, a highly successful Oakland marijuana entrepreneur,
bankrolled a professional signature-gathering effort that was bolstered by
volunteers from the state’s hundreds of medical marijuana dispensaries.
“This is a historic
first step toward ending cannabis prohibition,” Lee said. “I’ve always believed
that cannabis should be taxed and regulated and that our current laws aren’t
working.”
The initiative,
known as the Regulate, Control and Tax Cannabis Act, would make it legal for
anyone 21 and older to possess an ounce of marijuana and grow plants in an area
no larger than 25 square feet for personal use. It would also allow cities and
counties to permit marijuana to be grown and sold, and to impose taxes on
marijuana production and sales.
Four marijuana
legalization initiatives have been proposed, but Lee’s is the only one that
appears to have the financial support to make the ballot.
Lee's firm, one of
the state's most successful marijuana businesses, has spent more than $1
million on the measure and hired professional consultants to run the campaign.
Lee owns half a dozen mostly pot-related businesses in Oakland, including
Coffeeshop Blue Sky, a medical marijuana dispensary, and Oaksterdam University,
which offers classes on marijuana.
Polls have shown
growing support nationwide for legalization. In California, a majority favors
it. A Field Poll taken last April found that 56% of voters in the state and 60%
in Los Angeles County want to make pot legal and tax it. That margin, though,
is not enough to assure victory.
The political
climate has turned conservative in this non-presidential election year. Some prominent
marijuana legalization advocates have questioned whether 2010 was the right
year to test whether Californians would again break new ground on drug
legalization, as they did in 1996 when they approved marijuana for medical use.
If passed, the
initiative would put the state in conflict with federal law. The Obama
administration last year announced it would not prosecute medical marijuana
dispensaries that adhere to California's laws, but it has adamantly opposed
efforts to legalize marijuana for recreational use.
Source: latimes.com