Pubdate: Mon, 07 Jan 2002 Source: Bradenton Herald (FL) Copyright: 2002 Bradenton Herald Contact: http://web.bradentonherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/58 Author: Jackie Hallifax Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) GROUPS SEEK SIGNATURES TO AMEND CONSTITUTION TALLAHASSEE - A ban on public smoking. Mandatory treatment of low-level drug offenders. Slot machines at race tracks. Humane treatment of pregnant pigs. These are some - but not all - of the issues that people and groups want to get on the November ballot and then in the Florida Constitution. Other possible contenders include a cap on class sizes, which is being pushed by a state senator, and resurrection of an independent board to oversee state universities, an issue championed by a U.S. senator. There are nearly two dozen other "active" citizen initiatives, including proposals to legalize marijuana, protect children from abuse and give voters an option of "none of the above" on Election Day. But most have few, if any, signatures collected. And a lot of signatures are needed to get on the ballot - nearly half a million. Not that signatures alone can get a constitutional amendment proposed by petition drive on the ballot. All citizen initiatives also need to get the green light from the state Supreme Court, which reviews proposed measures for scope and clarity. The high court will bar from the ballot any citizen initiative it judges to deal with more than one subject. It will also reject proposed amendments if it believes the ballot title or summary is confusing or misleading. "The process is fairly self-cleansing in that you've got these two monstrous thresholds that you have to meet," said John Sowinski, an Orlando public relations consultant who has worked for and against several citizen initiatives over the last decade. Sowinski, who is working for a citizen initiative to ban public smoking, said last week he would be shocked if all six of the most active petition drives made it to the ballot. "If history repeats itself, four or five of them might get the requisite signatures they need and out of those four or five, the court might permit two or three of them on the ballot," he said. Sixteen citizen initiatives have made the ballot in the last 30 years and 11 have been added to the constitution. The amendment Sowinski is working for has the most signatures verified to the state, more than 215,000. That proposal would ban all smoking in restaurants and workplaces. Next is the slot machine proposal, with some 153,000 verified signatures, and the humane treatment of pregnant pigs measure, with 133,000 signatures. The slot-machine measure would let voters in 18 counties that have a horse track, dog track or jai-alai fronton decide whether those pari- mutuel facilities could install slot machines. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh