Pubdate: Mon, 14 Nov 2011 Source: Idaho Statesman, The (ID) Copyright: 2011 The Idaho Statesman Contact: http://www.idahostatesman.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/204 Author: Dan Popkey OTTER ON LEGALIZING POT IN IDAHO: 'I DON'T SEE THAT HAPPENING' In an interview with Idaho Conservative Blogger, Gov. Butch Otter says he's consulted with governors in states permitting marijuana use, but doubts the Legislature will ever send him a bill. If they did, he hinted he would veto the measure, calling pot a "gateway drug." Among Otter's major initiatives have been the Idaho Meth Project, a favorite cause of his wife, Lori. As a young lawmaker in the 1970s, Otter supported decriminalization, but his views have shifted. Rep. Tom Trail, R-Moscow, has pushed for years to legalize industrial hemp, but gotten no traction in the Legislature. If another effort were made to legalize pot, Otter said he expects proponents would consult with him. "I won't commit to signing or vetoing anything up front but I will relate to them the 16 states that now have it and I've talked to most every one of those Governors about what kind of problems are they having," he told the blogger, who writes anonymously but lands interviews with leading Idaho politicians. Citing his support for states' rights, Otter reiterated his view when he served in the U.S. House: that he doesn't support federal efforts to block legalization, but, "I don't ever want it to happen in Idaho..." Otter acknowledged the drug's effectiveness as pain relief, but said drug companies have responded with legal alternatives. Otter once supported decriminalization. He told Statesman columnist Steve Ahrens in 1977 that while he opposed drug use personally, he also opposed outlawing drugs. "If a person, of his own free will, wants to use marijuana, I question whether the government has any propriety in telling him he can't -- but it does when the result is misuse that harms someone else, " Otter told Ahrens, whose column was headlined, "Otter Seeks Freedom -- For Everyone." In the 1970s, Otter opposed a bill, which passed 57-9, to expand the definition of marijuana to any material including the plant's active ingredient. He also voted to loosen the standard for felony possession of pot from 1 ounce to 3 ounces. ICB's post also includes Otter's views on Occupy Boise. And ICB promises a future post on Otter's response to conspiracy theorists who see Chinese business interests in Idaho as a threat to U.S. sovereignty and a New York Times columnist's suggestion that he run for president. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.