Pubdate: Tue, 25 Sep 2012
Source: Telluride Daily Planet (CO)
Copyright: 2012 Telluride Daily Planet
Contact: http://www.telluridenews.com/forms/letters/
Website: http://www.telluridenews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3881
Author: Heather Sackett

COUNTY COMMISSIONERS SUPPORT AMENDMENT 64

Measure would legalize marijuana and regulate it like
alcohol

The San Miguel Board of County Commissioners last week became the
first county in Colorado to pass a resolution supporting Amendment 64,
which aims to regulate marijuana like alcohol.

The amendment, which will be put to Colorado voters on Nov. 6, would
make the personal use, possession and limited home-growing of
marijuana legal for adults 21 years of age and older, establish a
system in which marijuana is regulated and taxed like alcohol and
allow for the cultivation, processing and sale of industrial hemp.

San Miguel County Commissioner Art Goodtimes brought the resolution
before the board, which passed unanimously at the Sept. 19 meeting.

"I've been in the game a while, and I just believe it's the right
thing to do, and I believe the majority of citizens in this county
agree with me," Goodtimes said. "I just think it's a little hard to be
one of the first to do anything."

Mason Tvert, co-director of the Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like
Alcohol, said he provided information about the initiative to the BOCC
and asked for their support.

"We are very proud to have this endorsement," Tvert said. "For more
than 80 years government officials around the nation have been working
to maintain marijuana prohibition and it's refreshing to see someone
support ending the failed policy. Everyone knows there are countless
elected officials out there who support ending marijuana prohibition
but they feel they are not able to speak about it publically."

In 2006, an initiative to legalize marijuana was defeated by Colorado
voters, but Tvert says the measure is much more comprehensive this
time around. Regulating marijuana like alcohol, he says, would take
the drug out of the underground and generate significant tax revenue
and criminal justice savings.

Colorado legalized marijuana for medical purposes through a 2000
ballot measure. According to a recent Denver Post poll, Amendment 64
has the support of 51 percent of likely voters polled, compared with
40 percent opposed. There are proposals similar to Amendment 64 to
legalize marijuana this fall in Washington and Oregon.

The Colorado Education Association and the Colorado Municipal League
have both come out against Amendment 64 and Laura Chapin,
communications director for SmartColorado/No on 64 says that the
amendment is wrong for Colorado.

"Amendment 64 amends the Colorado Constitution and puts our state in
direct violation of federal law," Chapin said. "This means Colorado
could spend years tied up in court fighting the federal government - a
fight they would probably ultimately lose, just as Arizona did with
its immigration laws."

In addition to conflicting with federal laws, No on 64 says the
amendment would harm children, promote increased drug use and increase
impaired driving.

But Goodtimes says passing Amendment 64 just represents a social
change that has been a long time coming. Both Goodtimes and Tvert
pointed out that Colorado voters were ahead of the curve by repealing
the prohibition of alcohol before the federal government.

"It's just a social change that we have been very resistant to,"
Goodtimes said. "But I'm a child of the '60s. I think it's time for
change."
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