Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Most Populous State Yet May Legalize Pot in November
#1
Thumbs Up 
An Ohio ballot measure makes some reformers squirm, but backers says its grower oligopoly is nothing to worry about.


By Steven Nelson Aug. 18, 2015
5:02 p.m. EDT

In less than three months, marijuana legalization supporters will see a purple state blaze or a Buckeye burnout.

Ohio residents will vote Nov. 3 on whether to
allow adult possession of marijuana and a
regulated market for the drug – and the
measure may well pass. The state contains about as many people as Colorado and Washington state combined, but the possibility of it becoming the fifth – and the first east of the Mississippi – to end local prohibition on pot has been greeted with ambivalence by some legalization supporters.

That’s because the ballot initiative amending the state constitution would create an oligopoly for investors, delineating 10 very specific landholdings controlled by investors or groups of investors as approved commercial grow sites.

Many reformers don’t like that. Earlier this year, the state's Libertarian and Green parties expressed unease, as did Cleveland-born celebrity Drew Carey.

Concerned national reform groups have sat on the sidelines. Last week, the state government confirmed the group backing the initiative, ResponsibleOhio, had submitted the required 305,591 valid petition signatures for ballot access.

The group said it spent $2.5 million on the effort. National attention now is picking up and
ResponsibleOhio believes reform supporters
and a majority of Ohioans will find it acceptable.

“In November all eyes will be on Ohio,”
ResponsibleOhio spokeswoman Faith Oltman says. “At the end of the day … this proposal is a lot better than marijuana prohibition and the war on drugs.”

People shouldn't worry about the oligopoly, she says, because up to 1,150 retailers are allowed to sell marijuana and there's no cap on product manufacturers under the initiative.

After four years, a commission appointed by the governor would be able to allow more grow locations if it determines the supply is not meeting demand. But Mason Tvert, the co-director of Colorado’s successful 2012 legalization initiative, says whether new commercial growers would be added remains a concern.

Tvert, now communications director of the
Marijuana Policy Project – which helped
spearhead legalization ballot measures
in Colorado and Alaska and plans to back many more campaigns in 2016 – won’t condemn the Ohio measure, however. “It just is what it is,” he says. “We support any
effort that will replace prohibition with a system
in which marijuana is regulated, but it’s up to
voters to determine if this is the system they
believe is best.”

If the initiative fails, Tvert anticipates having to
answer persistent reporter questions on
whether the legalization movement – which
national polls generally find is supported by a
majority of Americans – has lost steam.

He offered a pre-emptive answer: It wouldn’t mean much.

Californians spiked a legalization measure in
2010 before the Colorado and Washington
measures saw a breakthrough in 2012, he points out.

Colorado voters rejected one in 2006 before their pivot six years later, as did Oregon voters in 2012 before accepting a rewritten initiative in 2014.

“When you think about voter behavior, if you’re a voter and walk in there and see a question on whether marijuana should be made legal, you don’t think, ‘I do, but people in Ohio seemed to think that initiative was a bad idea,’” he says.

A Quinnipiac University poll released earlier this year shows the measure has a fighting chance, with 52 percent support for marijuana
legalization in Ohio. Still, the effort may see
increased opposition as a “no” campaign takes shape.

ResponsibleOhio is paying a Florida firm to
conduct polling, Oltman says, but has not publicly released results.

Oltman says the model for financing the Ohio
initiative may prove useful in other states where national groups or purely altruistic donors are unable to dedicate resources for paid canvassers, something that’s doomed grass-roots ballot drives in places like Oklahoma and Arizona.

“Even though some of the grass-roots marijuana legalization supporters want to see a more grass-roots effort, that’s simply not an ideal way and a sustainable way to get to the ballot in Ohio,” she says, citing the cost and
organizational burden of qualifying for the ballot.

Like other U.S. jurisdictions that allow marijuana use, the legal age in Ohio would be 21.

Individuals would need to have a state license to grow four plants at home and store up to 8
ounces.

The states that currently allow adult marijuana
use under local law are Alaska, Colorado,
Oregon and Washington.

The nation’s capital and the Flandreau Santee Sioux tribe in South Dakota also have passed laws allowing personal use.

Under federal law, almost all pot possession
remains illegal, but the Obama administration
has allowed state autonomy under prosecutorial discretion.

Polls have found greater support for states' rights to legalize marijuana than support for legalization itself.

Although a defeat would open a public debate
about the inevitability of marijuana legalization, a win in a Midwestern state that's often a
presidential battleground would lend undeniable momentum to the reform movement ahead of 2016, when national pro-legalization groups plan to support initiatives in Arizona, California, Nevada, Maine and Massachusetts.
Semper Fidelis

[Image: SyAa0qj.png]

USMC
Nemo me impune lacessit
Reply
#2
This is one of the greatest things going on. We thought back in the 60's and 70's that in 20 years when the young people had grown up pot would be legal everywhere. Its taking a lot longer but its starting to happen.
Reply
#3
Come on Nov 3rd!! ...

It can't get here quick enough for me ...lol Smile
Semper Fidelis

[Image: SyAa0qj.png]

USMC
Nemo me impune lacessit
Reply
#4
(08-25-2015, 03:27 AM)Kittycat Wrote: Man, am I happy for those states! 

While my state governor is running for President, I don't think we'll see marijuana legalization anytime soon in NJ.

Angry Huh Dodgy

Kitty
The state is kind of liberal and usually votes Democratic, but your right. not gonna happen soon.
Reply
#5
The language on the ballot was written for a few wealthy investors to monopolize the industry in Ohio. Basically there will be 1200 licensed dispensaries around the state and they will only be able to sell marijuana grown from any of the 10 sites that are owned solely by a small number of extra wealthy investors. This year's ballot, if it passes, will make a small number of rich individuals more rich. It will not benefit your average individual. Hopefully people are aware of this. I think the wise decision would be for people to vote against and wait a year for a better proposal.
It's going to be a toss up. Ohio struggled to even get the issue on the ballot the past five years. This year the numbers were ok. But it still received less than 100,000 votes. I think this is just a big step in the right direction, but not enough for a win. And if this does pass, its going to be extremely hard to change because it will be a state amendment. I feel like people are eager to get it legalized and they don't realize they're just lining the pockets for small group of investors.
Reply
#6
The dirtbags always put up a bad law and pretend they made it right. In my state there was a referendum on medical pot but the crooked politicians passed a law allowing charlott's web type stuff but only for 2 or 3 very serious conditions and it had to be certified by a doctor who had to say there was no other treatment. Its been over a year and still no one can get it even those few who qualify. So they are going to put up another amendment. The last one got like 58% but needed 60% to pass and the garbage news papers said the voters "rejected" the amendment when they did no such thing.

But crooked thieving politicians can only do the bidding of the rich against the well being of the public for so long. Their tricks stop working and people rise up.
Reply
#7
Remember::::

Vote NO on 2

and

Vote YES on 3

3 Nov 2015

Let the people be heard!!
On November third!!

Ice
Semper Fidelis

[Image: SyAa0qj.png]

USMC
Nemo me impune lacessit
Reply
#8
Yeah...

But my feet show it...

Their "Longfellows" .... Lol
Semper Fidelis

[Image: SyAa0qj.png]

USMC
Nemo me impune lacessit
Reply
#9
I would like to write back to the person who pm'd me but they don't allow that unless I guess you have 50 posts. I've never seen that before, many places don't let you send a new pm but will let you reply if you get one.
Reply
#10
You should be there anytime now...
Semper Fidelis

[Image: SyAa0qj.png]

USMC
Nemo me impune lacessit
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)