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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CO: Pot Measure Put On City Ballot
Title:US CO: Pot Measure Put On City Ballot
Published On:2005-08-23
Source:Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO)
Fetched On:2008-01-15 19:42:20
POT MEASURE PUT ON CITY BALLOT

Denver City Council members held their collective noses Monday and approved
putting marijuana legalization on November's ballot.

They had no choice.

The measure's backers had collected enough signatures to force the matter
on the ballot - but city law still said the council had to give its approval.

Members lost no time in teeing off on the measure.

Councilwoman Jeanne Robb said smoking three marijuana joints was equal to
smoking three packs of cigarettes a day. She said it also kills brain cells.

Councilman Charlie Brown warned that political opponents would be "lower
than a snake's belly" if they tried to use the vote against members. Brown
and others noted that almost 99 percent of marijuana cases in Denver are
prosecuted under state law. The city ordinance would not change that, they
said.

If there is strong opposition to the measure, it wasn't evident at the City
Council meeting Monday night. Six people asked to speak at the announced
public hearing - all in favor of the legalization initiative.

Dr. Robert Melamede, former chairman of the biology department at the
University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, said he's smoked marijuana for
41 years. He said marijuana-like chemicals occur naturally in the body and
that the real thing might well save brains cells while slowing aging.

After the meeting, Melamede called some council members "flat earthers" for
their alleged lack of knowledge about the substance.

The measure would legalize possession of an ounce or less of marijuana by
adults.

The supporters' main argument Monday was that smoking marijuana was better
than drinking alcohol.

That line of reasoning did not appear to impress council members.

Councilman Michael Hancock spoke out the loudest against the measure. He
said he has seen firsthand that marijuana use leads to harder drugs and can
be devastating.

Also Monday, the council reversed itself and voted not to put on the
November ballot a measure that would make the city clerk's office an
elected position and give it responsibility over city elections.

The measure passed on an 8-4 vote on first reading a week earlier, but
support has slipped since then. Council President Rosemary Rodriguez
decided to take the matter off the council's to-do list and spend more time
researching the issue.

Also Monday, the president of the Denver Barbarians Rugby Club issued an
apology for team members who were accused of acting like, well, barbarians
on a flight back to Denver after a tournament. Paul Hoskins said the team
will work at a fundraiser for crime victims.

Team members were accused of rowdy behavior on the flight, including
allegedly urinating in the galley and on the walls of a lavatory.

There was a final twist at the City Council meeting Monday. For the first
time, a sitting U.S. senator made an appearance before the council. U.S.
Sen. Ken Salazar was there to promote the new energy bill passed by Congress.
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