Pubdate: Tue, 07 Dec 2004 Source: Las Vegas Sun (NV) Copyright: 2004 Las Vegas Sun, Inc Contact: http://www.lasvegassun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/234 Author: Kirsten Searer Cited: The Committee to Regulate and Control Marijuana (CRCM) http://www.regulatemarijuana.org/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/props.htm (Ballot Initiatives) RULES CHANGE COULD THREATEN SMOKING PETITIONS Three initiatives that would amend state laws on smoking and marijuana use could be disqualified in the next few days, and backers are hinting they might take the issue to court. Groups supporting two different smoking bans and a relaxation on the state's marijuana laws thought they had gathered enough signatures to put their issues in front of the state Legislature in the 2005 session. Now some are saying that they feel the rules are being unfairly changed. Counties weren't due to give final tallies of signatures from the groups until late Monday, but all three groups had produced thousands of extra signatures and were feeling confident they had plenty. One of the clean air groups even held a happy hour Friday afternoon to celebrate. Yet word circulated Monday that the secretary of state's office was waiting on a legal opinion before allowing the measures to qualify, saying that the groups might have misinterpreted the number of signatures they needed. According to a handbook put out by the secretary of state's office earlier this year, people seeking to amend state law had to collect 51,337 signatures by Nov. 9. That's 10 percent of the votes cast in the 2002 general election. The secretary of state's office received a complaint several weeks ago that those instructions don't jibe with the state Constitution, which requires petitions to contain "10 percent or more of the voters who voted in the entire state at the last preceding general election." Technically, the last general election was on Nov. 2, just days before the petitions were turned in on Nov. 9. Based on voter turnout for the 2004 election, groups would need 83,156 valid signatures. Supporters of the petitions said it's ridiculous to hold them to the 2004 election standards, pointing out that the 2004 election results were not even certified until Nov. 23 -- two weeks after the petition signatures were due. But Chief Deputy Secretary of State Renee Parker said her office is concerned that the Constitution clearly states that petition signatures must correlate with the number of votes cast in the last election. A state Supreme Court ruling in 1994 followed a strict interpretation of the Constitution, finding in a recall election that the number of petition signatures needed must correspond with the last election that was held, Parker said. Parker said her office is consulting with its liaison in the attorney general's office to get an unofficial opinion on the matter. "We have no intention at this point of saying 2004 or 2002 numbers," she said. "We're waiting for the attorney general's office to get back to us on that." Parker said she hopes for a ruling in the next few days. Buffy Martin, the government relations director for the American Cancer Society, is one of the many petition drive organizers awaiting the ruling. Her group is one of about 25 in the Nevada Tobacco Prevention Coalition, which is pushing the the Nevada Clean Indoor Air Act, a tough smoking ban on all public places except the gaming areas of casinos, standalone bars, brothels and tobacco retail stores. "We're not going to react until we actually have something to react to," she said Monday. Still, Martin said her group, which turned in more than 77,000 signatures, followed the rules in the secretary of state's manual and kept in constant communication with the office, which she said never indicated that the 2004 standards would be used. "We were never informed that those numbers might change," she said. Patrick Smith, who is helping to represent the Smokefree Coalition, which is supporting a looser set of restrictions on smoking, said the coalition has received no official word about whether his group's initiative would qualify for the ballot. The Responsibly Protect Nevadans from Second-Hand Smoke Act would prohibit smoking in open public areas such as day care centers, grocery stores and restaurants. Establishments with nonrestricted gaming licenses, including bars, strip clubs and casinos, could allow smoking. The group, funded largely by local bars and casinos, turned in more than 93,000 signatures and reportedly would qualify under 2002 standards but not under 2004 standards. "We're still moving forward with our plan," Smith said. "We'll just wait to see if anything happens." Backers of the regulation of the marijuana measure, which would legalize up to 1 ounce of marijuana while strengthening laws against driving under the influence, could not be reached for comment. The Committee to Regulate and Control Marijuana submitted more than 84,000 signatures. Parker said the secretary of state's office is aware that the 2004 election results were not officially certified when the petitions were due. Also, she said, the office realizes that groups started collecting signatures months before the 2004 elections and could not have known how many people would vote. "Our first reaction was, OK, they turned it in after Nov. 2, but they couldn't have possibly known prior to Nov. 2 what the Nov. 2 turnout would have been," she said. Still, the 1994 state Supreme Court case, which Parker said was a very similar situation, convinced the secretary of state's office that it had to seek an official legal ruling. "We looked at it and said, 'We need the AG's advice on this,' " Parker said. "We'll go with what they say." Tom Sargent, a spokesman for the sttorney general's office, said he cannot discuss any informal advice his office might give to the secretary of state because of attorney-client privilege. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek