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California's New Cannabis Initiative

vta

Active member
Veteran

Source: Chico News & Review, The (CA)
Author: Tom Gascoyne


MARIJUANA FLASHBACK

Signature Gathering Begins for Recreational Pot Initiative

An effort to legalize marijuana use in California beyond the medicinal applications allowed by Proposition 215 has been launched for the third time in the past four years.

On Sept. 26, California Secretary of State Debra Bowen announced those behind this latest try may begin collecting the 504,760 signatures of registered voters needed to qualify the initiative for the ballot. The signatures must be collected by Feb. 24 of next year.

The initiative, which is being pushed by Los Angeles-area marijuana activists Berton "Buddy" Duzy and Michael Jolson, "[D]ecriminalizes marijuana and hemp use, possession, cultivation, transportation, or distribution," according to the state attorney general's official summary. It would also require a case-by-case review of those "currently charged with or convicted of nonviolent marijuana offenses, for possible sentence modification, amnesty, or immediate release from prison, jail, parole, or probation."

The state Legislature would be asked to create laws to license and tax commercial marijuana sales, allow doctors to recommend pot use for patients regardless of age, limit an employer's right to test employees for marijuana, and bar state or local police from aiding the enforcement of federal marijuana laws.

Last year, legalized marijuana use was approved in Colorado and Washington. In August, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder told the governors of those states that the Department of Justice would allow them to regulate the legalized use of marijuana for adults.

A similar California ballot measure failed in 2010, but did garner 46 percent of the vote. In 2012, Duzy and Jolson failed to gather enough signatures to place it on the ballot. Duzy said he's been involved in trying to legalize marijuana for most of his adult life. He runs a group called the Reefer Raiders, who are friends and supporters of the late pot crusader and author Jack Herer. The Raiders have been filing marijuana initiatives since 1980.

"I am motivated by the simple fact that the cannabis hemp plant is by far the most versatile and useful plant on the planet and that it has been actively suppressed by the many special-interest industries that feel threatened by the plant," Duzy said in an emailed message. "Stories abound about people who have been able to abandon many of their prescription medications by substituting cannabis use. The pharmaceutical industry is very aware of this and lobbies heavily to keep it illegal."

Other industries, Duzy argues, including those that manufacture paper, fiberboard, building materials as well as those who extract fossil-fuel, are also against legalization of the plant.

"Hemp can replace trees for paper, fiberboard, and other building materials," he said. "Hemp, when grown for biomass, can yield up to 10 dry tons per acre, making it the best candidate for biomass ethanol fuel."

Duzy said the same industries helped criminalize marijuana in the early 20th century and are now working to keep it illegal.

"Beyond hemp, I feel that adults should be able to use pot recreationally as a safe substitute for alcohol, and that locking people up for [using] what is basically a safe herbal substance is a social travesty and a waste of taxpayer money and jail space," he said.

The financial impact if the measure passes, according the secretary of state's summary, will mean "reduced costs in the low hundreds of millions of dollars annually to state and local governments related to enforcing certain marijuana-related offenses, handling the related criminal cases in the court system, and incarcerating and supervising certain marijuana offenders."

There is also a potential increase in annual tax revenues "in the low hundreds of millions of dollars" connected to the sale of marijuana and industrial hemp, the report concludes.

Duzy said there are more than 500 volunteers across the state ready to hit the streets to collect signatures.

"We are adding dozens more [volunteers] every day and so I am confident that our grassroots effort has a good chance for success," he said.
 

vta

Active member
Veteran
Source: Chico News & Review, The (CA)


LEGALIZATION IS THE ANSWER


Decriminalizing Pot Will Put an End to Cultivation As a Criminal Enterprise

Another effort to decriminalize the recreational use of marijuana is now underway in California. Organizers are getting a game plan together to gather about 500,000 signatures to qualify an initiative-the so-called California Cannabis Hemp Initiative-for the November 2014 ballot. They have until February to do so.

Considering how expensive and ultimately destructive the war on pot has been in the Golden State, particularly to the lives of those who've been busted for using, growing or selling the drug, this legalization effort is commendable.

Prohibitions on marijuana have never worked. From the days of Reefer Madness to today, whether kids or adults, people will find a way to get their hands on pot. If there's one thing criminalization has succeeded in doing well, it has been to keep the profit motive in place. Case in point: Many growers are against legalization. They don't want their product-the No. 1 cash crop in the state-devalued. That's telling.

Keeping pot illegal has led to a huge industry of pot profiteers growing under the guise of the state's medical-marijuana law, the so-called Compassionate Use Act. Growers often plant much more marijuana than necessary by cultivating indoors or in remote locations.

In Butte County, this has led to grotesque environmental violations in the foothill regions, where whole hillsides have been graded and clear-cut to accommodate pot farms. There, the threat of chemical fertilizers seeping into the nearby watersheds, including the Feather River and Lake Oroville, is very real.

As it stands, marijuana cultivation is largely a criminal enterprise. Let's not forget that people are still murdered over this herb. The only sensible answer to putting an end to the harmful costs society has been paying for decades is to legalize marijuana and allow adults to legally purchase it from safe sources in the daylight as they do other drugs, including alcohol and tobacco.
 

Crooked8

Well-known member
Mentor
ICMag Donor
Veteran
I will be so happy if this passes. I agree though, its way too rational hah
 

mojave green

rockin in the free world
Veteran
Source: Chico News & Review, The (CA)


LEGALIZATION IS THE ANSWER


Decriminalizing Pot Will Put an End to Cultivation As a Criminal Enterprise

Another effort to decriminalize the recreational use of marijuana is now underway in California. Organizers are getting a game plan together to gather about 500,000 signatures to qualify an initiative-the so-called California Cannabis Hemp Initiative-for the November 2014 ballot. They have until February to do so.

Considering how expensive and ultimately destructive the war on pot has been in the Golden State, particularly to the lives of those who've been busted for using, growing or selling the drug, this legalization effort is commendable.

Prohibitions on marijuana have never worked. From the days of Reefer Madness to today, whether kids or adults, people will find a way to get their hands on pot. If there's one thing criminalization has succeeded in doing well, it has been to keep the profit motive in place. Case in point: Many growers are against legalization. They don't want their product-the No. 1 cash crop in the state-devalued. That's telling.

Keeping pot illegal has led to a huge industry of pot profiteers growing under the guise of the state's medical-marijuana law, the so-called Compassionate Use Act. Growers often plant much more marijuana than necessary by cultivating indoors or in remote locations.

In Butte County, this has led to grotesque environmental violations in the foothill regions, where whole hillsides have been graded and clear-cut to accommodate pot farms. There, the threat of chemical fertilizers seeping into the nearby watersheds, including the Feather River and Lake Oroville, is very real.

As it stands, marijuana cultivation is largely a criminal enterprise. Let's not forget that people are still murdered over this herb. The only sensible answer to putting an end to the harmful costs society has been paying for decades is to legalize marijuana and allow adults to legally purchase it from safe sources in the daylight as they do other drugs, including alcohol and tobacco.
i don't like the tone of this^
 

Eighths-n-Aces

Active member
Veteran
limit an employer's right to test employees for marijuana, and bar state or local police from aiding the enforcement of federal marijuana laws.




what happens in california is going to have an effect on all future weed laws! if this ^^^^ passes it's another big step in the right direction

from what i understand colorado's laws do not help you much if your employer wants to be a dick. we'll see how long it is before someone take that one to court
 

Crusader Rabbit

Active member
Veteran
This is way much better than Prop 19 which favored big Oakland growers and failed. This time it's all about individual freedom. Freedom to grow what you want. Freedom to keep what you want. Drug testing is limited to the amount of active THC in your bloodstream, not THC metabolites from smoking it the weekend before last. The amount of taxation is limited too so that repressive taxes don't fuel a black market. They're going for broke with this initiative. Sure hope it passes.
 

OLDproLg

Active member
Veteran
SHould be a NO BRAINER!!!!!!!!

Do it for OUNCE CALi,for gawd sakes you HAVE the people!
Vote the shit in,and LETS END THIS FUCKIN WAR NOW.......
Lg
 

subZ-ro

Member
"Decriminalizing Pot Will Put an End to Cultivation As a Criminal Enterprise"


This is just flat out not true. Hope it passes though Im ready.
 

Hydrosun

I love my life
Veteran
This is way much better than Prop 19 which favored big Oakland growers and failed. This time it's all about individual freedom. Freedom to grow what you want. Freedom to keep what you want. Drug testing is limited to the amount of active THC in your bloodstream, not THC metabolites from smoking it the weekend before last. The amount of taxation is limited too so that repressive taxes don't fuel a black market. They're going for broke with this initiative. Sure hope it passes.

You are sooooo right. Prop 19 failing didn't cause any backlash against cannabis and now it looks like CA may get their FREEDOM back.

Gov. Brown should already have a commission set up to start freeing cannabis prisoners. He can't be too early on this issue, and it will boost his popularity.

But as some have said, all this sounds too rational. Please god let it be so.

:joint:
 

SCF

Bong Smoking News Hound
Veteran
lets hope California held out so we can be smart, see whats working and whats not. how far we can bend the limits
 

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