Pubdate: Wed, 31 Aug 2016
Source: Press Democrat, The (Santa Rosa, CA)
Copyright: 2016 The Press Democrat
Contact:  http://www.pressdemocrat.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/348
Author: Guy Kovner

OPPONENTS OF CALIFORNIA POT BILL LED BY PATRICK KENNEDY

Patrick Kennedy, a recovering drug addict, former Rhode Island 
congressman and member of the nation's most famous political family, 
is spearheading a national campaign to thwart legalization of 
recreational marijuana.

Hezekiah Allen, a former Humboldt County marijuana farmer like his 
parents and grandparents, is a Sacramento lobbyist who heads the 
state's largest group of cannabis growers.

They aren't exactly political bedfellows, but the two share a concern 
over California's Proposition 64 on the November ballot: Both believe 
it would open the door to Big Marijuana corporate dominance, 
threatening the culture and livelihood of the small-scale farms 
entrenched for decades on the North Coast.

Kennedy, magazine editor David Frum and former drug policy adviser to 
the Obama administration Kevin Sabet, co-founded Smart Approaches to 
Marijuana, known as SAM. Sabet said with no limit on the size of 
legal pot grows, Proposition 64 "will transform the landscape of 
rural California with huge plantations of marijuana."

"It's Big Tobacco reincarnated," he said. "It's a smokescreen for big 
business."

SAM, with a meager $2 million campaign war chest, is opposing 
legalization measures in California and four other states, Nevada, 
Arizona, Massachusetts and Maine, all up for a vote on Nov. 8.

With a $64,000 donation, the group is the single largest contributor 
to California's "No on Prop. 64" campaign. Compare that to the $2.5 
million put up by the Yes on 64 campaign's leading donor, tech 
billionaire Sean Parker. It's a David versus Goliath cash mismatch: 
just over $200,000 total raised by the anti-legalization campaign 
compared with at least $6.6 million for the pro-pot group.

Proposition 64, the Adult Use of Marijuana Act, would allow people 21 
and over to possess an ounce of marijuana and grow up to six plants 
at home for personal use. State analysts say it would generate up to 
$1 billion in taxes, and a recent poll says more than 60 percent of 
voters support it.

Allen's 700-member Cannabis Growers Association is divided almost 
equally between "yes" and "no" on the measure, with a large undecided 
bloc. But he freely acknowledges a common stand with SAM against the 
economic "green rush" that both say Proposition 64 would unleash.

"We just can't have those giants take over the marketplace," Allen 
said. "We don't want anything-goes, free-market competition. That's 
what gave us Joe Camel cigarettes being marketed to teens."

Allen estimates there are about 53,000 marijuana grows in the state, 
employing about 280,000 people. A 2,500-square-foot outdoor garden is 
commercially viable, he said.

Proposition 64's commercial cultivation licensing scheme allows a 
Type 5 license with no limit on garden size. Those permits would not 
be available until 2023, giving small growers a five-year shield from 
wide-open competition.

California's medical cannabis law, approved by the Legislature last 
year, limits outdoor gardens to 1 acre.

Sabet, who said he will be in California campaigning against the 
proposition after Labor Day, agreed the North Coast's traditional 
family pot farmers have reason to be worried.

"It's going to put mom-and-pop grows out of business," he said, 
calling the measure - championed by Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom - "a 
corporate power grab from Wall Street and Silicon Valley."

SAM plans to raise more money, and Sabet thinks a large Hispanic 
voter turnout against Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump 
will bolster his effort to defeat legalization.

But a poll released two weeks ago by the Institute of Governmental 
Studies at UC Berkeley found that 64 percent of registered voters 
favor marijuana legalization, with 36 percent opposed. Blacks and 
Latinos, at 72 percent and 69 percent, respectively, were more 
supportive of legalization than whites (62 percent) and Asians (58 percent).

Tim Rosales, the "No on 64" campaign manager, said his side wouldn't 
match the fundraising might of Parker and the ballot measure's other 
wealthy backers, including those who see it as "an investment opportunity."

Already, investors and local governments are positioning themselves 
for pot's future in California.

The ArcView Group, for example, an Oakland-based cannabis investment 
firm, says its members have plunged $83 million into the burgeoning 
legal weed industry. Locally, Santa Rosa last week approved the 
city's first medical cannabis processing facility and also has three 
pending requests for cultivation permits.

"It's going to be tough to get your voice out," Rosales said.

But the 2010 campaign to beat a marijuana legalization measure, 
Proposition 19, succeeded with just $400,000, despite being outspent 
10-to-1 by the measure's backers, he said.

Should Proposition 64 prevail on Nov. 8, Allen said his group will 
continue working to protect family-operated pot farms. The measure 
allows legislative amendments to various provisions, including the 
possibility of a cap on cultivation size, he said.

"The election is Tuesday night. We'll be back at work Wednesday 
morning," Allen said.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom