New Marijuana Legalization Initiative Filed; Backers Needed

Discussion in 'Marijuana Business and Industry' started by jainaG, Oct 6, 2015.

  1. So the same people who couldn't keep their own treasurer Dan Rush from lying, cheating, bribing and stealing when around politicians and union workers wants broke-assed sick taxpaying medical marijuana patients to front their expensive recreational weed (which BTW is *nothing* at all because booze is deadly and cannabis is not) stores right before the holidays?


    What happens to the under-21 kids needing cbds for MEDICAL purposes? Why are recreational party favors more important to these people than ensuring that critically-needed medicines get to the taxpayers?



    Good luck with all of that


    article http://www.sfweekly.com/thesnitch/2015/10/05/new-marijuana-legalization-initiative-filed-backers-needed

    Multiple efforts to legalize cannabis
    in California are currently afoot. If you're a registered voter, you
    may have already signed a petition to put adult recreational use of marijuana
    on the November 2016 ballot. But very few - if any - of those efforts
    matter, because very few - and possibly not any - of those efforts have any
    money or institutional support.


    Late Friday, the marijuana legalization effort that "matters" kicked
    off in earnest when backers of an organization called Reform CA filed
    their proposed language for the "Control, Regulate, and Tax Cannabis Act
    of 2016" with the Attorney General's Office.



    If the initiative qualifies for the ballot and is approved by voters, adults 21
    and over would be allowed to possess up to an ounce of cannabis, which would be
    removed from the state's list of banned substances. Commercial cultivation and
    sales would be licensed and taxed in a way similar to alcohol, with oversight
    from a state agency, and individuals would be allowed to grow their own without
    a license.


    But this effort is still lacking something major: money. As much as $20 million
    may be needed to allow adults legal weed, and so far, the big money players -
    including Silicon Valley mogul Sean Parker - needed to make legalization a
    reality are uncommitted.


    First, a rundown of the initiative, which was written by a major law firm based off of
    recommendations from a "Blue Ribbon" panel of
    experts formed by the ACLU and chaired by Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom. If
    approved, it would:


    Repeal current state laws prohibiting cannabis
    possession, cultivation, and sales;
    Allow individuals 21 and over to possess up to an ounce
    of cannabis;
    Allow personal grow spaces of up to 100 square feet;
    Allow for sales, "regulate[d] in a manner
    consistent with the sales of alcohol,";
    Allow medical marijuana operators currently in business
    an easy path to acquiring an adult recreational license;
    Leave intact and untouched medical marijuana activity,
    including the commercial licensing structure for the medical cannabis
    industry approved by the Legislature last month that's currently awaiting
    Gov. Jerry Brown's signature.


    The state recreational marijuana
    industry would be overseen by a state commission, of which the lieutenant
    governor - in this case, pro-legalization Newsom - would serve as chair.


    Marijuana would be "regulated in a manner consistent with other legal
    agricultural products in the state," and a system of tiered licenses would
    hopefully ensure that "the industry and regulatory system are not
    dominated by large, corporate interests."


    The initiative also makes medical marijuana law even stronger. Bans of medical
    marijuana activity would only be allowed by voter initiative, which would undo
    many dispensary bans here in the Bay Area.


    Reform CA is chaired by Dale Sky Jones, who also served as chairwoman of 2010's
    Prop. 19. That legalization effort was defeated, 53.5 percent no to 46.5
    percent yes, but paved the way for successful legalization efforts in other
    states. Jones's co-proponent on the legalization measure is Alice Huffman,
    president of the state NAACP.


    Other members of Reform CA include representatives from California NORML, the
    California Cannabis Industry, and medical marijuana patient advocacy group
    Americans for Safe Access.


    Not included right now are former board members involved with the Drug Policy
    Alliance and with the Marijuana Policy Project.


    The DPA, with major funding from the late Peter Lewis, chairman of Progressive
    Auto Insurance, has funded other major drug reform efforts, like legalization
    in Washington state, and MPP was pivotal in Colorado. Those states both
    legalized adult recreational, non-medical marijuana in 2012.


    Before Friday's filing, DPA representatives were noncommittal and talked about
    going off on their own with a "plan b," according to LA Weekly. An
    earlier draft of a proposed legalization initiative, which made the rounds
    around Labor Day, was a working DPA draft.


    Reform CA's Jones told SF Weekly this weekend that she hopes to convince
    DPA to back this effort - which would be even easier to do if other big-money
    backers hopped on board. Currently, there are none.


    Lewis's heirs appear also noncommittal, as is Napster founder and former
    Facebook president Sean Parker, who donated to Prop. 19 in 2010 and is seen as
    the most likely angel investor in a legalization venture.


    Other potential billionaire backers, like George Soros, whose late contribution
    saved medical marijuana ballot effort Prop. 215 from failure in 1996, have also
    yet to become involved.


    But for now, it's all about the language. Check the 26-page initiative for
    yourself - and stay tuned. https://d3n8a8pro7vhmx.cloudfront.net/ccpr/pages/299/attachments/original/1443981648/Ballot_Measure_%28Final%29_%2810-02-15%29.pdf?1443981648

     

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