Pubdate: Thu, 03 Jan 2002 Source: Cleveland Free Times (OH) Copyright: 2002 Cleveland Free Times Media Contact: http://www.freetimes.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1385 Author: Sandeep Kaushik Cited: Campaign for New Drug Policies: http://www.drugreform.org/ Implementation of California initiative: http://www.prop36.org Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services http://www.odadas.state.oh.us/ Gov. Taft http://www.state.oh.us/gov/ Attorney General http://www.ag.state.oh.us/ SAYING NO TO DRUG REFORM Is Taft Thwarting Ohio Voters' Right To Decide? If anyone can do it, they can. They're the Campaign for New Drug Policies, a drug-law-reform outfit based in California. They're proposing an Ohio ballot initiative for next November that would mandate first- and second-time nonviolent drug offenders be sentenced to treatment rather than prison. It would be a radical change in the Ohio criminal justice system, one that Governor Bob Taft is already working to defeat. But CNDP has an enviable record of success, and Gov. Taft's administration certainly seems to have confidence in the campaign's abilities, to the point of allegedly making illegal use of government time and money to block their efforts, as documents unearthed by CNDP may imply. So far, CNDP is winning the fight; a bevy of foot-soldiers will be dispatched in early January to begin collecting signatures, which they'll continue to do into the early summer. It's far from easy to get an initiative on the ballot. There are a lot of hoops to jump through, the most difficult involving the collection of 335,000 valid signatures from registered voters. And that requires serious organization and a lot of dough. It's not clear how much that will cost, but $1 million is a not unreasonable figure. Still, unlike most grass-roots advocacy groups, CNDP has both resources and experience. Funded by a triumvirate of big-money big shots - financial wizard George Soros, insurance magnate Peter Lewis and businessman John Sperling - they've spent over $10 million in pushing a dozen successful ballot campaigns in Western states in the past few years. Their efforts culminated with the easy passage, with 61 percent support, of Proposition 36 in California in 1999, which forms the model for the proposed Ohio initiative. If it passes here, it will divert some 3,000 offenders annually from prison to treatment, saving Ohio perhaps $60 million, according to Dave Fratello, the campaign's West Coast frontman. Fratello makes it clear that the treatment initiative, while covering all drug offenses, is really geared towards those who are addicted to harder drugs like heroin or cocaine, and who need medical help rather than a prison term. Because diversion into treatment is voluntary, they expect most pot smokers busted on minor marijuana charges in Ohio will elect to accept the standard fines, probation and license suspension rather than opt for a lengthy treatment program. This initiative would neither decriminalize marijuana, nor legalize it for medicinal purposes. (See cover story) [MAP archived at http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n009/a01.html ] Still, it's a start, one that Ohio voters seem more than ready to embrace. The campaign did extensive polling prior to publicly launching the Ohio initiative, and found 61 percent support. Even better, a follow-up joint OSU/Columbus Dispatch poll in August found the "yes" vote jumping to 74 percent. "Our California success was no fluke," Fratello contends. "People in Ohio realize the need for this. Voters are way ahead of politicians on this issue everywhere in America, and we intend to prove that." Symbolically, he adds, passing the measure in Ohio, which he describes as "the heartland of America," will make that point indisputable. But the Taft administration is not going to make it easy for them. Several months ago, CNDP organizers grew suspicious that state agencies, in particular the attorney general's office, seemed to be dragging their feet over their proposal. They filed for all state documents relating to their campaign under the Public Records Act, and the mountain of material they received in return appeared to confirm the worst. The administration not only opposes the ballot initiative, but seems to be actively thwarting efforts to allow voters the chance to decide for themselves. One document discussed several options for defeating the ballot initiative, including one strategy to "stop CNDP Initiative from Appearing on Ballot." Indeed, a memo from Luceille Fleming, the director of the Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services, baldly states that "the first and best possible defense against the proposed Constitutional amendment is to keep it off the ballot." Another option apparently being considered by the Taft administration is an alternative amendment placed on the ballot that would purport to do the same thing, but which, in fact, would be a toothless, watered-down version of the original. Meanwhile, the AG's office needed to approve the actual text that would appear on the ballot. Ordinarily this takes about two weeks, but in this case, more than two months went by without the AG's approval. Eventually, says Ed Orlett, who's heading the Ohio campaign, they decided to file a lawsuit against the state over the delay, but first they made sure the AG heard about it. Suddenly, he was informed that AG Betty Montgomery had signed the approval a week earlier. "Sure enough, the approval letter was hand-carried to our office the next day." Then, when further state-related delays ensued, Orlett put out the word he was going to file the lawsuit after all. "Again, within a half-hour, the necessary faxes started rolling in." Orlett, a well-connected former Ohio state legislator, knows "the biggest challenge is to be able to proceed without interference," and he hopes to ensure the state abandons its earlier shenanigans by keeping the pressure on them. He says he'll soon file a request with State Auditor Jim Petro to look into whether state offices have deployed public employees and resources improperly, or possibly illegally, in opposing CNDP's efforts, but admits he's "not too sanguine they'll rush out to investigate." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager