Pubdate: Sat, 26 Sep 2009 Source: Oakland Tribune, The (CA) Copyright: 2009 Bay Area News Group Contact: http://www.insidebayarea.com/feedback/tribune Website: http://www.insidebayarea.com/oaklandtribune Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/314 Author: Josh Richman, Oakland Tribune POT LEGALIZATION BALLOT MEASURE HITS THE STREETS SAN FRANCISCO -- Limited personal marijuana possession and cultivation would become legal, and the drug's commercial regulation and taxation would become an option, under a proposed ballot measure now being circulated for petition signatures. Oakland marijuana activists Jeff Jones and Richard Lee, proponents of "The Regulate, Control and Tax Cannabis Act of 2010," kicked off their petition drive Friday with a news conference at the national convention of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, or NORML. The measure would legalize personal possession of up to an ounce of cannabis, and would permit up to 25 square feet of cultivation per home. It also would let local governments decide whether to allow, regulate and tax commercial sales, a system somewhat like how alcohol is or isn't sold in "wet" and "dry" counties in some states. Lee, president of the Oaksterdam University cannabis training college, said he always has believed cannabis is safer than alcohol and that it's unfair and hypocritical to prohibit its use. Jones, executive director of the Patient ID Center -- formerly called the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative -- said the measure would stiffen penalties for those providing cannabis to minors while shoring up legal access for medical users as well as recreational users. Federal law still bans all marijuana possession, cultivation and use, but Jones said he believes the federal government wouldn't rush in to shut down commercial marijuana sales regulated by local governments under this measure because the Obama administration already has said it won't bust medical pot operations that conform with state law. Most federal raids these days are requested by local authorities anyway, he said, and a local government that regulates and taxes the drug's sales surely wouldn't ask federal agents to come bust sellers for it. Oakland mayoral candidate and former state Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata was scheduled to attend Friday's news conference and voice his support, but was unable to attend because of "unforeseen circumstances of a personal nature," said Dale Clare, executive chancellor of Oaksterdam University. Perata did send a statement that Clare read to reporters, noting the budget crisis and down economy have left the state, counties and cities unable to pay for schools, universities, health care, roads, environmental protection and other key services. "In this time of economic uncertainty, it's time we thought outside the box, and brought in revenue we need to restore the California dream," Clare read from Perata's statement. Perata's support of the measure could be a shrewd electoral move: About 80 percent of Oakland voters casting ballots in a July special election approved a tax on cannabis businesses. That applies to Oakland's four city-licensed medical marijuana dispensaries for now; Jones and Lee said if their measure passes and Oakland so chooses, the tax could apply to future recreational marijuana businesses, too. The proponents must collect signatures of 433,971 registered voters by Feb. 18 in order to qualify the measure for the November 2010 ballot. Lee said they've hired the Masterson and Wright petition drive management firm, expecting to spend about $1 per signature. "We've already raised a good portion of the amount we need," Lee said. Jones said a legislative bill to legalize and tax marijuana, now being revamped by author Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, D-San Francisco, could become "enabling legislation" that fills in details of a state regulatory scheme allowed under this measure. NORML Executive Director Allen St. Pierre said his organization hasn't endorsed the Jones-Lee measure over other marijuana legalization measures that might appear on the same ballot next year, but he believes there's "a genuine zeitgeist in the United States" to legalize the drug once and for all. "As usual," he said, "California is leading the way on an important social issue." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake