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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NV: Judge Asked To Review State Petition Dispute
Title:US NV: Judge Asked To Review State Petition Dispute
Published On:2005-01-05
Source:Reno Gazette-Journal (NV)
Fetched On:2008-01-17 04:34:34
JUDGE ASKED TO REVIEW STATE PETITION DISPUTE

A judge was asked Tuesday to resolve a dispute over a petition to limit
smoking in public places -- a petition that was disqualified as a result of
a controversial attorney general's opinion.

Carson City District Judge Bill Maddox was asked by lawyers for the
American Cancer Society and Nevada Secretary of State Dean Heller to
determine whether the petition should be presented to the 2005 Legislature.

The case also would affect a second smoking-restriction proposal and a
petition to ease marijuana possession laws. All three proposals were
derailed as a result of the attorney general's opinion.

Cancer Society attorney Bob Crowell called the request to Maddox the best
way to get a quick ruling on the number of signatures required on
initiative petitions.

Besides the case pending before Maddox, the American Civil Liberties Union
of Nevada, representing the Marijuana Policy Project, plans to file a
federal court lawsuit this week over the opinion by Attorney General Brian
Sandoval.

Sandoval is standing by his opinion despite a request from Heller to
reconsider. Relying on that opinion, Heller last month said the initiative
petitions to limit smoking and to permit adults to have one ounce of
marijuana failed because they did not have a required 83,156 valid signatures.

The Cancer Society, the American Heart Association and the American Lung
Association had gathered 64,871 signatures for their proposal. Proponents
of the second petition to limit smoking, supported by casinos and bars,
turned in 74,348 signatures and the Regulation of Marijuana initiative had
69,261 signatures.

The petitioners believed they had to submit only 51,337 valid signatures,
based on a requirement of 10 percent of the voter turnout in the preceding
election. They felt that meant the 2002 election when about 512,000 voters
turned out.

They submitted their petitions after the Nov. 2 election -- and the
attorney general's office then said the most recent election had to be used
on calculating the 10 percent of the turnout. More than 830,000 voters went
to the polls last month.

Crowell said petitioners delayed turning in their signatures until after
the 2004 election at the request of some county officials who said they had
too much work facing them.
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