Pubdate: Wed, 05 Nov 2014
Source: Denver Post (CO)
Copyright: 2014 The Associated Press
Contact:  http://www.denverpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122
Author: David Crary, The Associated Press

POT USE OK'D IN OREGON AND D.C.

New York (AP) - Voters in Oregon and the District of Columbia 
approved ballot measures Tuesday allowing the use of marijuana by 
adults, elating legalization activists who hope to extend their 
winning streak across the country.

Oregon will join the company of Colorado and Washington state, where 
voters approved the recreational use of pot two years ago. The 
District of Columbia is on the same path unless Congress, which has 
review power, blocks themove.

Still to come were results from Alaska, which also had a 
marijuana-legalization measure on its ballot Tuesday.

The District of Columbia's marijuana measure does not provide for the 
legal sale of marijuana, leaving that matter up to the D.C. Council.

That's different from the measures in Oregon and Alaska, which would 
followthe example of Colorado and Washington state in setting up 
systems for regulating and taxing retail sales of marijuana.

The Drug Policy alliance, one of the leaders of the legalization 
campaign, said the results would bolster efforts to push through a 
ballot measure in California in 2016.

"The pace of reform is accelerating, other states are sure to follow, 
and even Congress is poised to wake from its slumber," said Ethan 
Nadelmann, the alliance's executive director.

The campaign in D.C. included a debate about race-the measure's 
supporters said blacks in the city had been disproportionately 
targeted for marijuana arrests.

Gary Fulwood, a support staffer for the city's fire and EMS 
department, voted for the initiative.

"The criminal justice system is getting bogged down by marijuana use, 
and a lot of the people who use marijuana aren't criminals," Fulwood 
said. "I don't see it being any worse than alcohol."

In Florida, a measure that would have allowed marijuana use for 
medical reasons fell short of the 60 percent approval to pass. Near 
complete returns showed it getting about 57 percent of the votes.

Other volatile issues on state ballots include gambling and abortion. 
Two competing measures in Washington state gave voters a choice on 
whether to expand background checks for gun sales. Some of the other 
questions before voters Tuesday:

Abortion: North Dakota voters rejected an amendment that would have 
declared in the state constitution "the inalienable right to life of 
every human being at every stage of development must be recognized 
and protected." A too-close-to-call measure in Tennessee would give 
state legislators more power to regulate abortion.

Gambling showdown: In Massachusetts, voters rejected a measure that 
would have repealed a 2011 law authorizing development of a slots 
parlor and up to three resort casinos.

Sick time: Massachusetts voters approved a measure that supporters 
say will establish the nation's strongest requirement for providing 
paid sick time to workers. Workers will be able to accrue up to 40 
hours of paid sick time in a given year, earning one hour for every 
30 hours worked. Companies with 10 or fewer employees would be exempt.

Teachers take stands: In Missouri, voters defeated a measure - 
bitterly opposed by teachers' unions - that would have tied teachers' 
jobs and salaries to the performance of their students. Teachers 
unions were supporting an initiative in Washington state that would 
reduce class size and increase staffing support in grades K-12.

Gun sales: Washington state had two competing gun-related measures. 
One seeks background checks for all gun sales and transfers, 
including private transactions. The other would prevent any such 
expansion covering purchases from private sellers. If both measures 
on Washington's ballot pass, it might be up to the courts to sort out 
the confusion.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom