Pubdate: Tue, 21 Feb 2006 Source: Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Copyright: 2006 Columbia Daily Tribune Contact: http://www.columbiatribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/91 Author: Matthew LeBlanc, staff writer Note: Prints the street address of LTE writers. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) MARIJUANA COMPROMISE WINS CITY COUNCIL APPROVAL The Columbia City Council last night approved a revised marijuana possession ordinance that supporters say will prevent felons and repeat drug offenders from taking advantage of the law's lenient sentencing guidelines. However, detractors of the updated law called it disingenuous and accused council members of shortchanging Columbia voters who overwhelmingly approved the original pot law in 2004. "I don't think you should be deciding what the people have already decided," said Tony Nenninger, a law student at the University of Missouri-Columbia. "It's the people you should listen to." The original law decriminalized small amounts of marijuana - 35 grams or 1A 1/4 ounces - and reduced the penalty for possession to a $250 fine. Violators also do not get a criminal record under the ordinance. A compromise agreement negotiated last year between Boone County Prosecuting Attorney Kevin Crane and attorney Dan Viets keeps those initial measures in place but adds four exemptions to the law: Anyone found guilty of a felony in the preceding 10 years. Anyone found guilty in state or municipal court of a Class A misdemeanor, other than misdemeanor marijuana possession or possession of marijuana paraphernalia, within the preceding five years. Anyone found guilty in state or municipal court of misdemeanor marijuana possession on two or more prior occasions during the preceding five years.Anyone arrested on misdemeanor marijuana charges who also is being held on suspicion of a felony or another misdemeanor offense chargeable only in state court. Viets, a chief supporter of the measure, began meeting with Crane to iron out the compromise after members of the Columbia Police Officers Association began circulating a petition in an effort to bring the issue before voters again. The four exemptions to the law first were suggested in a September letter from Viets to Mayor Darwin Hindman. Nenninger and another man who spoke at the meeting last night, Jonthon Coulson, said the deal amounted to back-room dealing and that the compromise casts aside the will of the voters. Others who spoke praised the agreement and the council's approval of the revised ordinance. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin