Pubdate: Sat, 06 Nov 2010 Source: San Gabriel Valley Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2010 San Gabriel Valley Tribune Contact: http://www.sgvtribune.com/writealetter Website: http://www.sgvtribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3725 Author: Bethania Palma Markus CALIFORNIA VOTERS BALK AT LEGALIZING RECREATIONAL MARIJUANA Californians may have gone their own way when they became the first in the nation to legalize medical marijuana in 1996. But 14 years later, they went the federal government's way when it came to recreational use. Proposition 19 would have made it legal for adults aged 21 and older to have an ounce of marijuana and grow small amounts for personal use. Fifty-four percent of voters rejected it in Tuesday's election and some chalked the failure up to Californians' unwillingness to flout marijuana's designation as an illegal drug by the federal government. "Before any state considers passing that type of initiative there needs to be a national conversation and Congress needs to take up the issue," said Covina police Chief Kim Raney, who was one of the leaders of the effort against Proposition 19. The measure at one point seemed destined for passage. In late September, the measure was leading by 7 percent, according to one field poll. Then momentum faded. Shortly before the election U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder vowed to fight it if it passed. Robert Ortiz, manager and director of Whittier Hope Collective, a medical marijuana cooperative, agreed with Raney. "I think there is still a fear because of federal law, with Holder's comments," he said. Ortiz also thinks the measure failed because of chaos and stigma created by what he called poor implementation of the medical marijuana law after its 1996 passage. "If more cities had fully implemented (medical marijuana) Proposition 215 we'd definitely be prepared to implement Prop. 19, but they're so far behind," Ortiz said. "When it comes down to it I think people knew what kind of problems it would cause." Lack of support from high-profile candidates and politicians like Kamala Harris, Steve Cooley and Diane Feinstein may have added to voters' wariness, said Kris Hermes, spokesman for Americans for Safe Access, an advocacy group for medical marijuana patients. "The fact they didn't support it and the federal government was willing to go to court to challenge it probably discouraged a lot of voters from voting `yes,"' he said. A representative from the Yes on 19 campaign didn't return phone calls seeking comment. Raney agreed that the lack of support for the proposition turned voters off. "I think the proponents were trying to put lipstick on it but they couldn't stop the erosion as every credible organization in the state of California came out against it," he said. He also felt the proposition wouldn't in reality do what it promised - raise revenue by regulating and taxing sales of the drug. "The way it was written, it had no chance to regulate, control and tax marijuana, so it was fundamentally flawed from the start," Raney said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt