Pubdate: Tue, 08 Aug 2006
Source: Oregonian, The (Portland, OR)
Copyright: 2006 The Oregonian
Contact:  http://www.oregonlive.com/oregonian/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/324
Author: Anna Griffin, The Oregonian
Cited: Citizens for a Safer Portland http://www.makeportlandsafer.org
Cited: Marijuana Policy Project http://www.mpp.org
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana)

MARIJUANA MEASURE FALLS SHORT FOR FALL BALLOT

Election - Improperly signed and dated petitions disqualify several 
thousand signatures

Talk about a buzz kill.

Although they paid petition circulators $94,000, organizers of an 
effort to make marijuana crimes Portland's lowest law enforcement 
priority failed to gather enough signatures for the November ballot.

The city auditor's office ruled that the group calling itself 
Citizens for a Safer Portland turned in 31,623 John and Jane Hancocks 
- -- more than the 26,691 they needed to qualify. But the city 
elections officer found that several hundred sheets, containing 4,449 
signatures, were not properly dated and signed.

In the end, the city gave the group credit for just 27,174 
signatures. So initiative organizers weren't surprised when a random 
sample showed too many of those were invalid, in most cases because 
the signers weren't registered voters.

Petition gatherers typically try to compile thousands more signatures 
than they need to weed out duplicates and people who aren't 
registered. Chris Iverson, one of the effort's organizers, says his 
campaign team collected more than 40,000 signatures. They weeded out 
some 3,000 duplicates and another 3,000 from people who signed but 
did not live in Portland.

The bigger problem was with all those discarded circulation sheets.

"The state rule says that if the signature on the circulation sheet 
doesn't match the signature in the voter registration database 
perfectly, they throw it out," he said. "A lot of the people 
gathering for us used shorthand or their initials, because they were 
doing so many of these sheets. It was obvious it was the same person 
- -- we had W-4s and all kinds of legal documents to prove it -- but 
because the law is so exacting, we lost those signatures."

Iverson, who also ran for City Council earlier this year, says the 
law is unfair toward grassroots campaigns, which rely more on 
volunteers and newcomers to the petition business. But he says he now 
knows how to run a successful petition campaign.

"The next time, I won't make any mistakes," he said. "The way I see 
it, we got two-thirds of the way there. We're probably going to try again."

Supporters of the marijuana initiative say police officers should 
spend their time fighting serious and violent crimes, not 
marijuana-related ones. Ballot measure organizers raised $126,259 -- 
almost all of it from the Washington D.C.-based Marijuana Policy Project.

Portland Police Bureau leaders have noted that marijuana already 
ranks low on their priority list. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake