Pubdate: Wed, 22 Jun 2011
Source: Seattle Times (WA)
Copyright: 2011 The Seattle Times Company
Contact:  http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/409
Author: Lynn Thompson, Seattle Times Staff Reporter

MARIJUANA-INITIATIVE BACKERS SAY STATE COULD LEAD CHANGE

Washington State Would Be Defying Federal Drug Laws If an Initiative
Filed Wednesday With the Secretary of State to Legalize and Regulate
Marijuana Is Adopted.

Washington state would be defying federal drug laws if an initiative
filed Wednesday with the Secretary of State to legalize and regulate
marijuana is adopted.

But backers said Wednesday that states can take the lead in ending
what they call the nation's failed war on drugs, much as individual
states, including Washington, repealed Prohibition before the federal
government.

"If people at the state and other states in this country say we're
ready to try a rational approach to marijuana laws, the federal
government has to take notice," said campaign director Alison Holcomb,
who is taking a leave from her job as drug policy director at ACLU
Washington.

Several of the initiative's backers, including Seattle City Attorney
Pete Holmes, travel guide Rick Steves and former Washington State Bar
Association President Mark Johnson, held a news conference Wednesday
at the Seattle Public Library to kick off the campaign.

The New Approach Washington initiative would legalize and regulate
recreational marijuana use, much as the state regulates alcohol.

Organizers say they hope to take advantage of their high-profile
backers - who include former U.S. Attorney John McKay - and an
aggressive fundraising campaign to collect the needed signatures.

The campaign will use paid signature gatherers, as well as volunteers,
Holcomb said.

New Approach Washington will have until Dec. 30 to gather 241,153
signatures to put the issue before the Legislature. Lawmakers then
could approve the measure or send it to voters.

Holcomb said polling showed about 53 percent of state voters favored
legalizing and regulating marijuana.

Holmes said murders by Mexican drug cartels now number almost 38,000
and that 60 percent of drug-cartel profits come from marijuana sales
in the U.S.

"We're complicit in those 38,000 murders. That's what prohibition has
done," Holmes said.

Under the initiative, distribution to adults age 21 and up would be
through state-licensed marijuana-only stores; production and
distribution would be licensed and regulated by the state Liquor
Control Board; and strict rules would be adopted for advertising,
store location and license eligibility.

The law would limit personal possession to one ounce of dried bud. It
would still be a crime to grow or deliver even a small amount of
marijuana, except by licensed producers or stores.

Another initiative campaign - to remove all state criminal and civil
penalties for marijuana use, possession and cultivation - is already
under way.

Its chairman, Douglas Hiatt, criticized New Approach Washington for
not seeking "meaningful reform."

His Sensible Washington campaign has collected only about 100,000 of
the 241,153 signatures required. To qualify for the November ballot,
signatures must be delivered to the Secretary of State by July 8.

No state has legalized marijuana for recreational use in such a way,
although some have decriminalized it.

Taxes on the sales and distribution of marijuana would generate $215
million in state revenue per year, sponsors of the new initiative say,
with roughly $40 million going to the state general fund and $175
million to drug education and public health. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.