News (Media Awareness Project) - US DC: House Subcommittee OKs Pot on D.C. Ballot |
Title: | US DC: House Subcommittee OKs Pot on D.C. Ballot |
Published On: | 2009-06-29 |
Source: | Washington Examiner (DC) |
Fetched On: | 2009-06-30 04:54:14 |
HOUSE SUBCOMMITTEE OKS POT ON D.C. BALLOT
A House appropriations subcommittee has lifted a long-standing budget
rider banning the District government from spending any money to
decriminalize marijuana.
The Financial Services panel, which has oversight of D.C., has
removed from the 2010 budget 11-year-old language outlawing the
District's use of federal or local funds to legalize marijuana or
reduce penalties for its possession or distribution.
This is definitely something we've been working with Congress on for
a few years now and communicated with the committee about," said
Bruce Mirken, spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project. "It's taken
a while to get it done, but it looks like maybe this will be the year
that it happens."
The financial services budget, marked up Thursday, "takes further
steps towards reducing undue congressional interference in local
affairs," Rep. Jose Serrano, the subcommittee chairman, said in a statement.
Serrano, D-N.Y., said the budget bill "allows the District to conduct
and implement a referendum on use of marijuana for medical purposes
as has been done in various states."
The District voted on medical marijuana once before, in 1998, but the
votes were declared invalid. Former Rep. Bob Barr raced to have his
anti-legalization language added to the budget two weeks before the
initiative vote was held. When the ballots were unofficially tallied
nearly a year after they were cast, it was learned that 69 percent of
voters backed legalization.
If added to the ballot now, it will pass again, said Chuck Thies, a
political strategist who worked on the 1998 pro-initiative campaign.
"I look forward to it being on the ballot next year," he said. "I
expect there would be a well-funded, well-organized citywide effort for 2010."
The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administrative is firmly against the
legalization of medical marijuana, arguing proponents "are spending
huge amounts of money to encourage a greater tolerance for drug use."
Smoked marijuana "has not withstood the rigors of science -- it is
not medicine and it is not safe," the DEA argues.
The financial services budget bill also eliminates a longtime ban on
the use of local funds for abortion, and it discontinues the ban on
the use of funds for domestic partnership registration.
A House appropriations subcommittee has lifted a long-standing budget
rider banning the District government from spending any money to
decriminalize marijuana.
The Financial Services panel, which has oversight of D.C., has
removed from the 2010 budget 11-year-old language outlawing the
District's use of federal or local funds to legalize marijuana or
reduce penalties for its possession or distribution.
This is definitely something we've been working with Congress on for
a few years now and communicated with the committee about," said
Bruce Mirken, spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project. "It's taken
a while to get it done, but it looks like maybe this will be the year
that it happens."
The financial services budget, marked up Thursday, "takes further
steps towards reducing undue congressional interference in local
affairs," Rep. Jose Serrano, the subcommittee chairman, said in a statement.
Serrano, D-N.Y., said the budget bill "allows the District to conduct
and implement a referendum on use of marijuana for medical purposes
as has been done in various states."
The District voted on medical marijuana once before, in 1998, but the
votes were declared invalid. Former Rep. Bob Barr raced to have his
anti-legalization language added to the budget two weeks before the
initiative vote was held. When the ballots were unofficially tallied
nearly a year after they were cast, it was learned that 69 percent of
voters backed legalization.
If added to the ballot now, it will pass again, said Chuck Thies, a
political strategist who worked on the 1998 pro-initiative campaign.
"I look forward to it being on the ballot next year," he said. "I
expect there would be a well-funded, well-organized citywide effort for 2010."
The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administrative is firmly against the
legalization of medical marijuana, arguing proponents "are spending
huge amounts of money to encourage a greater tolerance for drug use."
Smoked marijuana "has not withstood the rigors of science -- it is
not medicine and it is not safe," the DEA argues.
The financial services budget bill also eliminates a longtime ban on
the use of local funds for abortion, and it discontinues the ban on
the use of funds for domestic partnership registration.
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