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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CO: Controversial Pot Billboard Goes Up
Title:US CO: Controversial Pot Billboard Goes Up
Published On:2005-10-19
Source:Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO)
Fetched On:2008-01-15 10:47:30
CONTROVERSIAL POT BILLBOARD GOES UP

Colorado -- Backers of a Denver marijuana legalization ballot measure
unveiled a billboard today proclaiming "Alcohol use makes domestic violence
8 times more likely...Marijuana use does not."

The text-only advertisement on Federal Boulevard near Invesco Field at Mile
High debuted just days after Initiative 100 supporters scrapped plans for a
controversial billboard bearing the emotionally charged image of a battered
woman and her abuser with the slogan: "Reduce family and community violence
in Denver. Vote Yes on I-100."

Nowhere did the billboard mention marijuana or that the measure's passage
would amend Denver law to make it legal for adults to possess 1 ounce or
less of the drug.

Political leaders and domestic violence advocates condemned the ads for
misleading voters and exploiting the tragedy of abused women. Anti-violence
advocates said while alcohol use may compound abuse by someone predisposed
to domestic violence, drinking does not make someone a batterer.

"We do not back down from the message conveyed in (the cancelled)
billboard, but we do understand that it has offended and upset a number of
folks," Mason Tvert, head of the I-100 sponsor, Safer Alternative for
Enjoyable Recreation, said a noon news conference under the billboard at
Federal and 20th Avenue. "We have decided to change it so that it is less
graphic and more detailed in conveying our message that if adults are
allowed to use marijuana instead of alcohol we might be able to avert a
number of alcohol-related crimes that occur in this city."

The new billboard's message, underscoring the increased likelihood of abuse
with alcohol in red, is based on a 2003 study by addiction researchers at
the State University of New York at Buffalo.
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