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Marijuana
referendum makes its way onto ASCSU ballot
• The Rocky Mountain Collegian
By
Megan Schulz and Lila Hickey
April 01, 2005
http://www.collegian.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2005/04/01/424d095055efc
Supporters
of SAFER Choice gathered on the Lory Student Center Plaza Thursday
morning to celebrate the addition of a marijuana referendum to
the Associated Students of CSU ballot for the upcoming April 4
through April 6 elections.
"This
is a very symbolic measure," said Mason Tvert, SAFER Choice
executive director. "Ethically, the school has a vested health
interest in its students and should be doing everything it can
to make sure they are safe."
SAFER (Safer
Alternative for Enjoyable Recreation) Choice, a nonprofit organization
funded by a private donor, has been trying to extend the values
that marijuana use should have parallel punishments to alcohol
use on campus. It has also pushed the values and initiatives to
the University of Colorado-Boulder.
The success
of getting the referendum on the ballot does not constitute enforcement
of the policies. The students were able to make an audible statement
that will debut on the ballots Monday. If it succeeds at the polls
it will then be passed to the university's administration for
consideration.
Some T-shirts
that said "Party Organically" were given away at the
rally.
"There
is no doubt in anyone's mind that alcohol is a more acceptable
form of recreation on campus," Tvert said. "They should
not consider marijuana more severe than alcohol just because it
is illegal."
An anonymous
individual informally requested that the signatures collected
for the referendum be verified, so ASCSU Elections Committee members
began verifying the signatures. The committee would have exceeded
the ballot referendum deadline to verify all 2,421 signatures
on the petition one by one. Because of this deadline, the individual
decided not to formally contest the signatures, and the verification
process was stopped.
The Referendum
for Marijuana Policy Reform at CSU will be on the ASCSU ballot,
which will be available Monday through Wednesday for students
to vote on RAMWeb.
"Monday
is the first day of registration," said Redavid, a junior
liberal arts major. "We're hoping students who visit RAMWeb
to register will take time out to vote."
At least 10
percent of the CSU student body has to vote in the election in
order for it to be valid. Last year, a record-setting 24 percent
of the student body voted, said Nic Redavid, assistant director
of public relations and deputy elections manager at ASCSU.
When asked
if she thinks the referendum will pass, SAFER Choice student campaign
manager Zana Buttermore-Baca had a positive outlook.
"We just
need a majority of the vote," said Buttermore-Baca, a freshman
sports medicine major. "I think even students who don't smoke
(marijuana) will vote for us."
Buttermore-Baca
said she joined SAFER Choice because she thinks it is a good cause
and wanted to volunteer for something in which she believed.
ASCSU elections
will begin Monday at 8 a.m.
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