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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Voters May Say: Relax, It's Only Pot
Title:US CA: Voters May Say: Relax, It's Only Pot
Published On:2006-10-31
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 23:19:01
California Elections

VOTERS MAY SAY: RELAX, IT'S ONLY POT

Ballot measures in Santa Monica, Santa Barbara and Santa Cruz would
require that police not bother adults over the private use of marijuana.

Voters in three California cities will decide Tuesday whether to
require their police departments to make the private use of marijuana
by adults the lowest law enforcement priority.

The ballot initiatives in Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz and Santa Monica
are direct descendants of Oakland's Proposition Z, which passed
overwhelmingly in 2004, and of a similar measure approved by voters
in Seattle a year earlier.

Like organizers of the earlier initiatives, backers of the three new
measures received financial and technical assistance from the
Marijuana Policy Project, a Washington, D.C.-based organization
dedicated to the legalization and regulation of marijuana nationwide.

Project spokesman Bruce Mirken said his organization was approached
by local activists in each of the present cases.

"We're always talking to activists around the country, and if people
are interested in trying to replicate what was accomplished, we
definitely want to help," he said.

"Everybody knew we helped the Seattle and Oakland people. Certainly,
folks are working together and comparing notes and talking to each
other. Obviously, nobody wants to have to reinvent the wheel."

With funds provided by Cleveland insurance magnate Peter Lewis, the
organization gave $122,000 to support Measure P in Santa Barbara;
$65,000 for Measure K in Santa Cruz; and $155,000 for Measure Y in
Santa Monica. The project granted an additional $28,000 directly to
the Santa Monica effort.

Partisans of all three measures have been working with the same Bay
Area political consulting firm, the Next Generation, which also
advised the Oakland campaign. The websites maintained by advocates in
the three cities share an identical template.

As offspring of the same parents, the measures share a family
resemblance. All would, in essence, instruct police not to trouble
adults using or possessing marijuana in private homes, and not
participate in federal or state law enforcement projects directed at
marijuana users.

They also would establish commissions to oversee the implementation
of the measures and require police officers to make reports to the
commissions on incidents in which marijuana arrests were made.

Each of the measures would maintain current law enforcement
priorities on the distribution of marijuana to minors, its public use
and driving under its influence.

Proponents say that passage of the measures would free police
resources to combat more serious and violent crimes.

The Santa Cruz measure most directly resembles its Oakland parent in
that, unlike the Santa Barbara and Santa Monica initiatives, it
covers the distribution, sale and cultivation of marijuana.

"If people are going to be allowed to make personal use of it in
their homes, they have to be able to get the marijuana from
somewhere," said Kate Horner, campaign coordinator for Santa Cruz
Citizens for Sensible Marijuana Policy.

Horner said a poll conducted last year by her organization showed
that "83% of voters realize that the war on drugs has failed, and by
criminalizing marijuana we're just clogging our courts and wasting
our tax dollars and police resources."

The measure is opposed by police and some local politicians.

In Santa Barbara, where more than 11,500 voters signed petitions to
get Measure P on the ballot, a proponents' poll indicated that 60%
would vote to approve the initiative.

Lara Cassell, campaign coordinator for Sensible Santa Barbara, said
there was some mistrust of the measure among city police officers.

Santa Barbara Mayor Marty Blum opposes the measure but expects it to
pass, despite opposition by local police.

In Santa Monica, the Police Officers Assn. has been outspoken in its
opposition to Measure Y.

"Basically, it's an unnecessary and overbroad law," said Sgt. Jay
Trisler, the group's chairman. "Marijuana is already somewhat of a
low priority for law enforcement in general. It's a solution in
search of a problem. We don't have an issue here. In cities where it
was passed, like Seattle and Oakland, they had issues. All this would
do is slow our response down. It still doesn't make it legal; it
doesn't change any laws already in place."

Trisler noted that there have been incidents in which police
responding to calls about personal marijuana use have discovered
large caches of it and other illegal drugs, as well as other serious
breaches of law.

"If this ordinance were in place, and if other calls were pending, we
wouldn't have gotten to these calls," he said.

Nicki La Rosa, campaign coordinator for Santa Monicans for Sensible
Marijuana Policy, said she was optimistic the measure will pass, in
part because of the wide range of organizations, including the
California Nurses Assn. and Santa Monica Democratic Club, that have
endorsed it.

If it passes, Santa Monica would join West Hollywood as the only Los
Angeles-area municipalities to have issued such instructions to their
law enforcement agencies.

The West Hollywood measure, passed last summer, was not a ballot
initiative, but a City Council resolution.

"This is a partially symbolic measure," La Rosa said. "It does help
shift the consciousness about this whole drug war, and, as a city
that sets precedents, it behooves us to accept this measure."
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