Pubdate: Tue, 25 Nov 2003 Source: Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Copyright: 2003 Columbia Daily Tribune Contact: http://www.showmenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/91 Note: Prints the street address of LTE writers. Author: Dave Moore ETHICS PANEL FINES GROUP THAT OPPOSED POT PROVISION A group that fought a ballot proposal to decriminalize marijuana possession in Columbia has been fined $1,000 by the Missouri Ethics Commission for violating election rules. The Missouri Association of Community Task Forces is also losing its executive director, although she says her departure isn't related to the Nov. 13 consent order filed by the ethics commission. In the consent order, the task force stipulated that it didn't properly identify itself in a printed ad that opposed Proposition 1, which would have eased marijuana laws in Columbia. The group also agreed that it did not file a report with the county clerk detailing who spent the money, who received that money or what service or item was purchased, as election laws require. The group's executive director, Peggy Quigg, said the ruling and resulting fine would not deter the group, which also calls itself Missouri ACT, from taking part in future fights against the legalization of drugs. "If anything, this was educational and will help make us better in the future," said Quigg, who said she is leaving her post at the end of this year. She said she hopes to find work training community leaders at a regional or national level in drug prevention. If the ethics panel's finding had resulted in her departure, "I'd be gone already," Quigg said. "This decision has been a long time coming. I've been here six years, and I've taken the organization through a growth period." Quigg said the commission's findings don't tarnish the defeat of Proposition 1, which lost 10,461 to 7,629 on April 8. The money to pay the $1,000 fine will be taken from the organization's general fund, Quigg said. "It has to come from . non-federal money," she said. The money is donated by private people or generated through the sale of materials ACT Missouri produces, she said. Some of that money could have been tax-deductible contributions, she said. "It's the cost of doing business in the election," Quigg said. The group budgeted $5,000 to defeat Proposition 1, but spent about $3,000, she said. Columbia attorney Dan Viets, a board member of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said he was glad the commission ruled on the case that was triggered by his complaint. But Viets said the order did not address other issues he wanted the state attorney general's office to investigate, including whether the group, which has a not-for-profit status, could have violated election laws by using tax-deductible donations for campaign purposes. "I guess the attorney general's office chose to ignore that," Viets said. Another local drug-prevention advocate, Eve Pearson, called Viets' complaint a red herring meant to distract attention from the issue of drug abuse. "His goal is to get the issue back out again, so he can rant and rave about it some more," said Pearson, a member of Mid Missouri Coalition of Adolescent Concerns, which also opposed Proposition 1. "The bigger battle is what's right and what's wrong." "This is not at all a red herring," Viets said. "I really like to talk about the issue." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh