Pubdate: Tue, 03 Jan 2012
Source: Denver Post (CO)
Copyright: 2012 The Denver Post Corp
Contact:  http://www.denverpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122
Author: Kristen Wyatt, The Associated Press

COLO. POT ACTIVISTS TURNING IN LEGALIZE PETITION

DENVER-Marijuana
legalization activists in Colorado are turning in signatures Wednesday
to put the question on ballots this fall. The Campaign To Regulate
Marijuana Like Alcohol says it will turn in some 160,000 signatures in
favor of the ballot initiative, well above the roughly 86,000
signatures needed to put the question before voters.

The marijuana measure asks voters to make pot possession legal in
small amounts for adults over 21, without a doctor's recommendation.
The measure would also direct lawmakers to put a steep excise tax on
marijuana.

The state has 30 days to certify signatures and decide whether the pot
measure will be on ballots. If approved, the marijuana question would
be the first cleared for Colorado's 2012 election.

Last month, marijuana activists in Washington state turned in
signatures for a ballot measure in that state. Washington authorities
are still reviewing those signatures before it's cleared for the ballot.

Colorado is one of 16 states that allow marijuana with a doctor's
recommendation. Late last month, Colorado also became the fourth state
to ask the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration to reclassify
marijuana in a way that allows doctors to prescribe it as a medical
treatment.

Colorado's medical pot laws already conflict with federal drug law,
which bans marijuana in all cases. But the state has stopped short of
allowing marijuana for recreational use. A 2006 pot legalization
measure on ballots failed badly.

The head of Colorado's pot campaign, Mason Tvert, said Tuesday that if
the petition is successful, activists will start an education campaign
to persuade voters it's time to enact a direct challenge to federal
drug law.

"If this initiative passes, it will immediately remove the penalties
for private adult marijuana possession, and we hope the federal
government will allow Colorado to sensibly regulate it," Tvert said.

A spokesman for the national Marijuana Policy Project said more states
than Colorado and Washington are likely to decide legalization on
ballots this fall.

"There is definitely a national awakening going on about the harms of
marijuana prohibition," said Morgan Fox, a spokesman for the MPP, a
Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group that is the largest single
contributor to the Colorado campaign.

Marijuana legalization will have opponents in Colorado, though.
Republican Attorney General John Suthers has said it's a bad idea, and
that pot legalization for adults would increase the drug's use among
children.

Democratic Gov. John Hickenlooper has not taken a position on the
measure.

"You know, the voters voted on that a couple years ago, and it got
voted down," Hickenlooper said in an interview last week with The
Associated Press..

The governor concluded, "Before I come up with an opinion about that
.. we're going to have to sit down and look at the facts."
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