Pubdate: Wed, 07 Nov 2007
Source: Idaho Mountain Express (ID)
Copyright: 2007 Express Publishing, Inc
Contact:  http://www.mtexpress.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2296
Author: Terry Smith
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/industrial+hemp
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Ryan+Davidson

HAILEY VOTERS SAY 'YES' TO MARIJUANA REFORMS

Results Likely to Lead to More Litigation

Hailey's electorate approved three of four marijuana legalization or 
reform initiatives in a city election Tuesday, Nov. 6.

Voter returns that came in late Tuesday night showed close voting but 
approval of initiatives to legalize medical use of marijuana, to make 
enforcement of marijuana laws the city's lowest police priority and 
to legalize industrial use of hemp.

The initiative that failed would have mandated the city to regulate 
and tax marijuana sales and to establish a Community Oversight 
Committee to iron out the details for legalization.

The three approved initiatives also require the Community Oversight 
Committee to work out the details for implementation. The initiatives 
further require that the city of Hailey lobby other branches of 
government for the reform of marijuana laws.

The taxation and regulation initiative failed by a vote of 573-674, 
while the marijuana medical initiative passed by a vote of 687-581.

Hailey voters favored the police priority initiative by a margin of 
637-601. The industrial hemp measure passed by 683-565.

Hailey City Clerk Heather Dawson said 1,288 voters of the city's 
3,494 registered electorate turned out to vote in Tuesday's election.

Ryan Davidson, chairman of The Liberty Lobby of Idaho and the man who 
got the initiatives on the Hailey ballot, could not be reached for 
comment late Tuesday but said earlier that he was confident the 
initiatives would succeed.

The vote on the initiatives culminated more than three years of work 
on Davidson's behalf to put legalization issues before voters in the 
Wood River Valley. He started the project in August of 2004 when he 
presented initiating petitions for legalization to the cities of 
Hailey, Sun Valley and Ketchum. All three entities denied his 
petitions and a series of court actions ensued.

In September 2006, Davidson won a major victory when the Idaho 
Supreme Court ruled that municipalities do not have the right to 
determine the constitutionality of proposed initiatives. With that 
victory in hand, Davidson renewed his legalization efforts in 2007 
and successfully landed the four initiatives on this year's Hailey 
general election ballot.

He continues to work his proposed initiatives in Ketchum and Sun 
Valley and hopes to have them on ballots in those cities as early as 
the primary elections in May of 2008.

His work in the Wood River Valley is part of a larger grassroots 
effort to reform marijuana laws statewide.

Meanwhile, the Idaho Attorney General's Office has declined to say 
what it will do if any of the Hailey initiatives pass, but issued a 
statement last week reminding voters that possession of marijuana is 
a crime under both state and federal law.

City Attorney Ned Williamson predicted prior to the election that the 
city will be subjected to future litigation if the initiatives pass 
and said that the costs could be high for Hailey taxpayers. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake