Pubdate: Sat, 24 Jul 2004 Source: Bulletin, The (OR) Copyright: 2004 Western Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.bendbulletin.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/62 Author: James Sinks, The Bulletin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) MOST INITIATIVES FUNDED BY A FEW SALEM -- Sponsors of the slate of ballot measures submitted for the November general election set new records for initiative campaign fund-raising -- but it would be a mistake to assume the financial showing indicates widespread support, an Oregon campaign finance watchdog group says. The Portland-based Money in Politics Research Action Project, which released a new report this week, is cautioning voters to consider where money is coming from before they cast their votes this fall. Disclosures this week showed that seven active initiative campaigns collected a record-setting $7.5 million by mid-July -- and that most of that money came in big chunks from a handful of contributors. Meanwhile, miscellaneous donations of $50 or less -- one measure of the grassroots nature of a campaign -- made up less than 2 percent of support for five of those measures. The two measures that did rely on donations of $50 or less collected the least money of the seven. Those are a proposed Constitutional ban on same-sex marriage and an expansion of medical marijuana laws. "With few exceptions, a small base of deep-pocketed donors pays petitioners to put things on the ballot," said Sarah Wetherson, a research and outreach associate with the nonprofit research center. "Voters need to pay attention to who is paying to ask for their vote," she said. In a recent press conference, Gov. Ted Kulongoski said the slate of ballot initiatives is divisive and designed to benefit special interests and he urged voters to reject the entire lot. The prime example might be the effort to shutter scandal-ridden SAIF, the state's quasi-government workers' compensation insurer. That initiative campaign raised almost $1.6 million, and more than 99 percent of the money came from a single source: Liberty Northwest, a rival insurance company. But Lisa Gilliam, a spokeswoman for Oregonians for Accountability, said the expense is necessary. "The amount we have spent pales in comparison to what SAIF has spent on lobbying and advertising over the past decade," she said. "It will require tremendous resources to expose the truth," she said. The top money campaign so far is the effort to create caps on "pain and suffering" damages that can be awarded in medical malpractice lawsuits, which collected more than $4 million from health-care interests and still has $3 million in the bank. The state announced Friday that the anti-SAIF measure will be on the Nov. 2 ballot, bringing the total to five of the seven measures to qualify. Only one of the seven, an effort to reinstate term limits for Oregon legislators, has been rejected. State elections officials say that campaign failed to submit sufficient valid signatures. That initiative's chief petitioners are suing in federal court and are seeking a recount. That campaign collected roughly $364,000, with 97 percent of the money coming from an out-of-state political organization that advocates for term limits nationwide. Verification results for the final measure, the gay marriage ban, will be released this week, said John Lindback, director of the state elections office. However, circulators turned in more than 240,000 signatures, so it seems certain to qualify. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake