The Washington Times
1/9/06
Pot advocates
push statewide legalization
By Valerie Richardson
(Return to Press Section)
DENVER -- Stoked by their surprise victory in Denver, marijuana-legalization
advocates are hoping to ride the momentum with statewide ballot initiatives
this year in Colorado and Nevada.
Colorado activists announced a drive two weeks ago aimed at bringing
a clone of Denver's Initiative 100 before voters statewide in November.
Initiative 100 allows adults in the city to possess small amounts of
marijuana.
And activists in Nevada, who have secured a place for a legalization
measure on the state ballot in November, are taking heart in the success
of Initiative 100, which captured 54 percent of the vote in the Nov.
1 election.
"What Denver shows is that this is a mainstream issue," said
Neal Levine, campaign manager of Citizens to Regulate and Control Marijuana
in Las Vegas.
If the measures pass, Colorado and Nevada would become the first states
to win voter approval for marijuana legalization. Alaska allows adults
to possess up to 4 ounces of marijuana in their homes, thanks to court
decisions upholding privacy rights, but voters defeated a 2004 initiative
that would have abolished all penalties for possession and regulated
marijuana sales.
Denver political analyst Eric Sondermann warned that interpreting the
Denver vote as a mandate for statewide legalization would be "a
big mistake." He noted that the Denver measure never took effect
because authorities have since prosecuted violators under the state
law.
"The Denver vote was seen mainly as a symbolic vote with no statewide
impact," Mr. Sondermann said. "This will be seen as amending
state law."
Voters of these Republican-leaning states are known for their independent,
anti-big-government orneriness, advocates say
"There's a libertarian streak in Colorado and a respect for people's
individual rights throughout the West, so there's no reason people shouldn't
vote for this," said Mason Tvert, campaign director of Safer Alternative
for Enjoyable Recreation, the Denver-based group behind Initiative 100
and the statewide campaign.
Both state proposals would legalize possession of up to 1 ounce of marijuana
for adults older than 21, but that's where the similarities end. The
Colorado proposal, which goes before the Legislative Council on Wednesday
for review, says nothing about sales, production or taxation.
However, the Nevada initiative provides a detailed regulation system
in which marijuana would be sold only by state-licensed vendors and
located no closer than 500 feet from churches and schools. Sales would
be prohibited in gambling establishments, and penalties for selling
marijuana to minors or driving under the influence would be doubled.
The measure also earmarks half the revenues from taxing and licensing
for alcohol- and drug-treatment education, with the other half going
to the state general fund.
"The approach we've taken in Nevada is that what we need is a system
of regulation, not the Wild West, which is what we have now under prohibition,"
said Bruce Mirken, spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project in Washington,
which is directing the Nevada campaign. "The message is to treat
it the same as we treat alcohol."
Eleven states, including Colorado and Nevada, permit the use of marijuana
for medical reasons, and several cities, including Seattle and Oakland,
Calif., make possession the lowest law-enforcement priority.
(Return to Press Section)