Pubdate: Sun, 09 Jul 2000
Source: Saginaw News (MI)
Copyright: 2000 The Saginaw News
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Author: Barrie Barber

GRASS-ROOTERS' DEADLINE

A Saginaw attorney races the clock to put a statewide marijuana 
legalization issue on the ballot.

Saginaw lawyer Gregory C. Schmid's mission to collect 325,000 signatures 
ends Monday, win or lose.

That's when the leader of nearly 3,000 grass-roots volunteers will know 
whether he has gathered enough signatures to let Michigan voters decide in 
November if they should legalize the possession of a small amount of marijuana.

The Michigan coordinator of the National Organization for the Reform of 
Marijuana Laws won't say how near to the goal the group is teetering.

It's "too close to call," he says. "We've been getting them pouring in for 
months."

The band of signature gatherers needs more than 302,711 signers, but Schmid 
says he won't turn them in unless they have at least 325,000.

At least one state leader isn't rooting for Schmid and his allies.

"I would hope that the chances are nil," says Darnell Jackson, director of 
the state Office of Drug Control Policy and a former Saginaw deputy police 
chief and assistant prosecutor.

Schmid began his pot crusade when he became angered over the government 
overturning a Washington, D.C., voter initiative in 1998 that legalized 
medical marijuana use.

"This isn't about marijuana anymore," he says. "It's about civil rights.

"We don't encourage people to use marijuana, but we won't pretend it's evil 
for the government's sake."

The Personal Responsibility Act would legalize the use, and possession of 
as much as three ounces of marijuana, including seedlings and up to three 
plants. It would earmark drug forfeiture funds to voluntary education and 
treatment programs. If the proposal passes, it would become a part of the 
state Constitution.

The law's name is a misnomer, says Jackson.

"I don't think it's personally responsible to have people going around 
smoking marijuana," he says, adding that decriminalization would send up in 
smoke the idea that drugs are harmful.

"It clearly sends a mixed message to do drugs, and it's not OK."

In an editorial opinion, Jackson also argued that two-thirds of all 
Americans don't want to make marijuana legal, and THC, the active 
ingredient in the drug advocated for medical use, is readily available in 
prescribed capsules.

"I don't think we need to legalize any more substances that people have 
problems (with)," he says.

Schmid advocates education to prevent drug use, and criticizes spending 
billions on the war on illegal substances as well as a "country where we 
tell kids just say no, then dope half of them on Ritalin."

The pro-initiative group may link hands with the American Civil Liberties 
Union to challenge a few state communities where, Schmid says, petitioners 
were barred from gathering signatures during Fourth of July festivities.

Not only has the group battled authorities, Schmid says, but it also has 
contended with "paranoia" among people who believe police will arrest them 
if they sign a petition.

"It's amazing, but the world needs lunatics, too," he says.

Schmid, 40, a self-avowed believer of temperance and moderation, doesn't 
smoke marijuana now, but once did.

"In college it was a required course," he says.

The Personal Responsibility Amendment is at www.ballot2000.net.

Call Barrie Barber at 776-9725.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart