Pubdate: Mon, 18 Sep 2000 Source: Press Democrat, The (CA) Copyright: 2000 The Press Democrat Contact: Letters Editor, P. O. Box 569, Santa Rosa CA 95402 Fax: (707) 521-5305 Feedback: http://www.pressdemocrat.com/opinion/letform.html Website: http://www.pressdemo.com/ Forum: http://www.pressdemo.com/opinion/talk/ Author: Mike Geniella, Press Democrat Staff Writer, MENDOCINO POT MEASURE A FIRST Pinches Joins Green Party Fight Cattle rancher Johnny Pinches, a conservative former member of the Mendocino County Board of Supervisors, stepped outside his isolated home last week and held the phone toward the sky so a caller could hear the "whump, whump, whump" of a government helicopter passing overhead in search of marijuana gardens. Pinches said the noisy helicopters are becoming a nearly daily experience for him and other backwoods residents who live on the slopes of Island Mountain, a rugged pot-growing region where the borders of Mendocino, Humboldt and Trinity counties meet. Pinches and his neighbors are braced for even more flights as the harvest of the county's infamous cash crop, estimated to have a street value of nearly $1 billion, reaches its peak over the next several weeks. Before the illicit crop is in, local, state and federal law enforcement agencies will spend more than $1 million to wage their annual anti-marijuana campaign in the so-called "Emerald Triangle." It's a war that Pinches contends can never be won, despite 15 years of effort. "I may be just an old hillbilly, but I figure all that money would have been better spent on fighting hard drugs like methamphetamine, and the rampant abuse of alcohol," Pinches said. To that end, Pinches has capped years of advocating the legalization of marijuana as a county supervisor and Republican state Senate candidate by endorsing a local measure on the November ballot that calls for decriminalization of the personal use of pot. Measure G, if passed by local voters, would allow pot to be grown for personal use, a first in the country. Drafted by local Green Party members, the ballot measure goes beyond local pot ordinances adopted in San Francisco and Berkeley that merely instruct local police agencies to minimize the priority of marijuana enforcement. Pinches said that as a political independent he's not worried that his endorsement of the measure might taint any future political ambitions. "I don't care who the other supporters are. To me, it simply makes no sense to be doing what we're doing in regards to marijuana," Pinches said. If passed locally, Measure G would permit limited cultivation and possession of up to 25 marijuana plants per adult but would continue to make the transportation and sale of pot illegal. It also directs the county sheriff and district attorney to make marijuana law enforcement and prosecution their lowest priority and orders county officials to lobby state and federal agencies for the decriminalization of marijuana nationwide. So far, the marijuana measure has escaped local controversy and faces no organized opposition. But some local school officials and youth leaders worry passage of Measure G will send the wrong message. "It's pretty fundamental. We already have problems with marijuana use in the schools, as we do with cigarettes and alcohol. Drug use of any kind should be discouraged," said Gary Brawley, superintendent of the 6,000-student Ukiah Unified School District. Even if Measure G passes, Brawley said, the school district will continue to enforce its "zero-tolerance" marijuana policy. Rick Klug, youth and family adviser at the First Presbyterian Church in Ukiah, also said Measure G sends the wrong message. "I understand some of the arguments surrounding marijuana, but frankly I just don't think we need to be advocating drug use of any kind," he said. As it is, federal officials say Measure G isn't worth the bother. "Until marijuana is reclassified under the federal drug control act, its cultivation and use remains subject to federal prosecution no matter what state and local agencies do," said Gretchen Michael, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Justice Department. Measure G backers say they've tried to tailor provisions of the initiative to current marijuana enforcement policies of Mendocino County Sheriff Tony Craver and District Attorney Norman Vroman: targeting major pot-growing operations while ignoring "mom-and-pop" growers unless brought to law enforcement's attention. Still, Craver and Vroman said they will not endorse the measure. "People should have the opportunity to make a statement about law enforcement priorities, but the fact of the matter is we are sworn to uphold laws despite questions about their effectiveness," Craver said. He said he's not an advocate of recreational marijuana use, but he said he agrees with Measure G proponents that current state and federal criminal laws surrounding pot are ineffective. "There are a lot of legal, social and medical issues involved that aren't adequately addressed, but that's not my job," Craver said. "Under state and federal laws, marijuana cultivation and use is illegal and because of that we will continue to go after the big operators," he said. He said he doesn't "have the time or staff to worry about mom-and-pop growers unless they're brought to our attention." Vroman said he's worried passage of Measure G might signal outsiders that there will be no marijuana enforcement in the county, traditionally one of the highest producers of the illicit weed. "I fear people think growing marijuana is suddenly going to be legal and there will be no prosecution in Mendocino County. They're going to be sadly mistaken," Vroman told a crowd of Measure G proponents two weeks ago. Despite the reservations of Vroman and others, proponents are confident the measure will win voters' endorsement. Pinches said he doesn't find that surprising in a county where 64.5 percent of local voters in 1996 supported Proposition 215, which allows the use of marijuana for medical reasons. Although passed by state voters, Proposition 215 continues to be legally challenged by federal agencies, which claim jurisdiction over the cultivation and use of marijuana. "By and large, people who live here are fed up with the antics surrounding the government's costly anti-marijuana campaign," he said. He said every time he sees a government helicopter flying overhead, he figures it costs taxpayers $700 to $800 an hour. "Yet down in Laytonville at the high school, the kids can't play winter sports in the gym because it leaks so badly. Where's our priorities?" Pinches signed the ballot argument in favor of Measure G, which was placed on the November ballot by a unanimous vote of the Board of Supervisors after promoters collected more than twice the required number of signatures from registered voters. Other signers include Millie Lehrman, founder of the Ukiah Cannabis Club; Ukiah physician Peter Keegan; Ann Deirup, a county leader for the Gray Panthers; and Richard Johnson, publisher of an environmental weekly newspaper and chief organizer of the Measure G campaign. Former Rep. Dan Hamburg, D-Ukiah, is a member of the campaign committee. You can reach Press Democrat Staff Writer Mike Geniella at 462-6470 or e-mail at --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D