Pubdate: Thu, 14 Jul 2011 Source: Missoulian (MT) Copyright: 2011 Missoulian Contact: http://www.missoulian.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/720 Author: Charles S. Johnson Cited: Proposed constitutional initiative to decriminalize marijuana in Montana: http://mapinc.org/url/0ZIaIwCY Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) EAST HELENA MEDICAL MARIJUANA PATIENT PROPOSES INITIATIVE TO DECRIMINALIZE POT HELENA - An East Helena medical marijuana patient who had worked in law enforcement wants to amend the state constitution by initiative in 2012 to decriminalize all pot here and treat it like alcohol. "Let us end the pointless battles," Barb Trego wrote state officials in submitting her idea. "Let us stop treating medical marijuana and non-medical marijuana differently. Let us stop treating alcohol and marijuana differently. "We are far better off as a state, and as a society, if the people who wish to participate in the purchase, production or consumption of either product are subject or regulations and taxation, not prohibition." Trego said Thursday she uses medical marijuana to reduce swelling from a degenerative disc in her back. Based on her experience as a deputy sheriff and reservist in Lewis and Clark County, Trego said there is "no call for us here in Montana to spend our law enforcement resources investigating, arresting or punishing adults who merely produce or use a small amount of marijuana." Trego, 56, filed the paperwork for a constitutional initiative with Secretary of State Linda McCulloch's office this week. That triggers a review by several agencies before the petition language is approved and she can start collecting signatures. Her measure differs from the proposed referendum already cleared by state agencies that, if enough Montanans sign petitions, would let voters decide whether to retain or reject the more restrictive 2011 state medical marijuana law. A Helena district judge has temporarily blocked parts of the new law from taking effect. Trego initially told the Missoulian State Bureau Thursday she was part of a group putting forward the initiative, but declined to identify it. She called back later to say she's offering the measure on her own, not on behalf of any group. "I have watched the back-and-forth over our state's medical marijuana law with sadness and frustration," she said in the letter. "Fundamentally, marijuana is a safe and effective plant-based medicine. But it is treated in the political debate here in Montana as some kind of heretical force, or as a dangerous narcotic, or both. It is neither." * Her proposal would amend the state constitutional provision that says a person 18 years of age or older is an adult for all purposes, although the Legislature or the people by initiative may set the legal age for purchasing, consuming or possessing alcoholic beverages. Trego would add this language: "Adults have the right to responsibly purchase, consume, produce and possess alcoholic beverages and marijuana, subject to reasonable limitations, regulations and taxation. Except for actions that endanger minors, children or public safety, no criminal offense or penalty of this state shall apply to such activities." Montana has higher law enforcement priorities than "to target individuals who produce or possess marijuana for personal use," her findings say. Trego's findings have a caveat that says voters recognize the federal government maintains "a strict prohibition" on marijuana, just as it once had a prohibition on alcohol. As a result, the amendment "may be limited in its applicability until such time as the national prohibition (on marijuana) or its enforcement, is relaxed or repealed," they say. Senate Majority Leader Jeff Essmann, R-Billings, who sponsored the more restrictive 2011 medical pot law, said a ballot measure to decriminalize marijuana was proposed in California last year. "Even in that very liberal state, the people rejected legalization," he said. It lost by a margin of 53.5 percent to 46.5 percent. Essmann said Trego is at least taking "an honest, forthright method to accomplish what she wishes," unlike those who advocated for the 2004 voter-passed ballot measure to legalize marijuana for some medical purposes. "Unfortunately, I think the people that advanced the medical marijuana initiative in 2004 may have misrepresented what their ultimate goal was, which has created the mess the Legislature is trying to deal with," Essmann said. To qualify Trego's measure for the ballot, supporters will need to obtain the signatures of 10 percent of the voters in 40 of the 100 state House districts and 10 percent of the total voters statewide, or 48,674 people. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom