Pro pot advocates want California vote soon

Written by Janet

If it goes according to plan, Californians could legally possess up to one ounce of pot and cities could sell and tax the drug under an initiative marijuana advocates want to place on the state’s 2010 ballot.

The Control, Regulate and Tax Cannabis Act of 2010 is being pushed by pot activists who sense a positive shift in public sentiment toward the federally banned substance. A recent Field Poll found that 56 percent of California voters supported legalizing marijuana for recreational use and taxing its proceeds.

Those backing it are entrepreneurs in the state’s medical marijuana industry, which has become lucrative since California voters legalized marijuana for medical use in 1996.    A real moneymaker….

One against is Richard Lee, an Oakland pot dispensary owner and founder of Oaksterdam University, a medical marijuana trade school. As California cities confront plummeting revenues and the state’s massive budget crisis, voters will be open to new ways to fill public coffers.  So let’s analyze this a minute, people want it legal, but no one wants it taxed….hmm, they can’t have it both ways.  If booze and cigarettes are taxed, why not pot?  But go one step further.  – tax the grower, seller and user….that would put more money in the state coffers….

Supporters expect to finalize the proposal’s language by the end of the month. The latest draft recognizes the right of anyone age 21 or older to possess up to one ounce of marijuana for personal use. Local and state authorities could raise that amount.

Residents would also have the right to cultivate up to 25-square-foot plots of marijuana on private property, but only for personal consumption.

To reach the November 2010 ballot, advocates need 433,000 signatures from registered voters.  Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, a Democrat from San Francisco, is also pushing a bill in the state Legislature that would regulate marijuana much like alcohol.  

Passage of the measure would test the Obama administration’s hands-off policy toward enforcing federal marijuana laws when they conflict with state statutes.

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced earlier this year that federal agents will now target marijuana distributors only when they violate both federal and state laws. California and a dozen other states allow medical use of pot, but none allow possession of the drug for purely recreational purposes.  Federal law outlaws marijuana cultivation, use and sales.

4 Comments

  1. newsdeskinternational

    Melissa Etheridge: Medical marijuana should be legal

    Each day an estimated 6,000 Americans will try marijuana for the first time. It’s the most common illicit drug in the United States with nearly 15 million people using it at least once a month.

    http://www.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/Music/06/16/ac360.etheridge/index.html?section=cnn_latest

  2. newsdeskinternational

    Pot legalization gains momentum in California

    Marijuana advocates are gathering signatures to get as many as three pot-legalization measures on the ballot in 2010 in California, setting up what could be a groundbreaking clash with the federal government over U.S. drug policy.

    At least one poll shows voters would support lifting the pot prohibition, which would make the state of more than 38 million the first in the nation to legalize marijuana.

    Such action would also send the state into a headlong conflict with the U.S. government while raising questions about how federal law enforcement could enforce its drug laws in the face of a massive government-sanctioned pot industry.

    The state already has a thriving marijuana trade, thanks to a first-of-its-kind 1996 ballot measure that allowed people to smoke pot for medical purposes. But full legalization could turn medical marijuana dispensaries into all-purpose pot stores, and the open sale of joints could become commonplace on mom-and-pop liquor store counters in liberal locales like Oakland and Santa Cruz.

    Under federal law, marijuana is illegal, period. After overseeing a series of raids that destroyed more than 300,000 marijuana plants in California’s Sierra Nevada foothills this summer, federal drug czar Gil Kerlikowske proclaimed, “Legalization is not in the president’s vocabulary, and it’s not in mine.”

    The U.S. Supreme Court also has ruled that federal law enforcement agents have the right to crack down even on marijuana users and distributors who are in compliance with California’s medical marijuana law.

    But some legal scholars and policy analysts say the government will not be able to require California to help in enforcing the federal marijuana ban if the state legalizes the drug.

    Without assistance from the state’s legions of narcotics officers, they say, federal agents could do little to curb marijuana in California.

  3. newsdeskinternational

    Calif pot backers submit petitions for Nov. ballot

    Backers of a California initiative to legalize marijuana said they would submit far more signatures Thursday than needed to qualify the measure for the November ballot.

    http://www.theolympian.com/nationworld/story/1118703.html

  4. newsdeskinternational

    California: Governor Strikes at Marijuana Initiative

    Arnold Schwarzenegger has blasted California’s largest union for supporting a November ballot measure to legalize marijuana. The governor wrote an opinion …

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