Pubdate: Fri, 23 May 2008
Source: Idaho Mountain Express (ID)
Copyright: 2008 Express Publishing, Inc
Contact:  http://www.mtexpress.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2296
Author: Terry Smith

HAILEY TO VOTE ON POT INITIATIVES AGAIN

Same 4 Ballot Measures Were Considered Last November

As Hailey officials prepare to battle about marijuana  in court, the
city's electorate prepares to go to the  polls to vote once again on
four pro-pot initiatives.

The latest round in the city's ongoing cannabis dispute  will be
settled Tuesday between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. when  the same initiatives
voted upon last November will once  again be put to the ballot-booth
test.

Three passed last time and one failed. Approved were  initiatives to
legalize medical use of marijuana, to  legalize use of industrial hemp
and to make enforcement  of marijuana laws the lowest priority for the
Hailey  Police Department.

Not approved was an initiative to require the city to  tax and
regulate distribution and use of the drug.

So why a second vote?

"Cause I knew that the city would pull something like  this," said
Ryan Davidson, a former Bellevue resident  and the man who got the
initiatives on the ballot. He  is chairman of The Liberty Lobby of
Idaho and is often  referred to simply as "the pot guy."

Davidson, who now lives in Garden City, was referring  to the lawsuit
that the mayor, the police chief and a  city councilman filed against
the city in Blaine County  5th District Court to have the previously
approved  initiatives declared illegal.

Davidson described the new vote as "kind of an  insurance
policy."

"If I hadn't put them on the ballot again, they  probably would have
killed them all by now," he said.  "It makes it politically less
viable for them to do  something if they pass twice."

The marijuana issue has been relatively quiet as of  late in Hailey,
with no pro or con groups surfacing  publicly to campaign.

Davidson himself has been busy with the Ron Paul  presidential
campaign in Boise and hasn't had a lot of  time to spend on the pot
issue. He's hopeful that at  least the same three voter-approved
initiatives will be  approved once again.

"I'd think it's going to be close to the same  percentages as last
time," he said. "If all four are  approved, that would be great."

Last November, 1,288 voters, about 37 percent of the  city's
registered electorate, showed up at the polls.

The medical marijuana and industrial hemp initiatives  were approved
by about 53 percent of voters. About 51  percent of the voters
approved the  lowest-police-priority initiative, while the regulation
and taxation measure failed with only 47 percent voter  approval.

Following is a brief summary of the initiatives. The  complete text
can be found at Hailey City Hall or on  the city's Web site at
www.haileycityhall.org.

- - The Hailey Cannabis Regulation and Revenue Ordinance  would require
the city to regulate sales and use of  cannabis, a scientific name for
marijuana, and would  allow it to tax the substance.

- - Davidson considers this the most important of the four  initiatives.
It doesn't explicitly say that marijuana  would be legal in the city,
but establishes a framework  to come up with the details. The
framework would be  created by a Community Oversight Committee, which
would  be allowed to deliberate for a year before finalizing
legalization specifics.

This and other initiatives would require the city to  lobby other
levels of government for reform of  marijuana laws.

- - The Hailey Medical Marijuana Act would legalize  medical use of
marijuana. Details of legalization would  be worked out by the
Community Oversight Committee.

- - The Hailey Lowest Police Priority Act would make  investigation of
adult marijuana use the city's lowest  law-enforcement priority.
Davidson thinks this one has  the greatest chance of approval.

- - The Hailey Industrial Hemp Act would legalize  industrial use of
hemp, a different variety of the  cannabis plant not usable by
marijuana smokers since  it's low on THC, the chemical that induces a
high.

Pot Vote

The polls are open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday, May  27. Hailey
voters can cast their ballots on the  marijuana initiatives in Room
903 at the Community  Campus (the old high school) on Fox Acres Road.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Derek