Pubdate: Tue, 02 Oct 2012 Source: Western Front, The (Western Washington Univ., WA Edu) Copyright: 2012 The Western Front Contact: http://westernfrontonline.net Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/994 Author: Olivia Henry ADVOCATES CLASH OVER STATE BALLOT MEASURES The gallery was full in the Bellingham City Council chambers Saturday for a discussion of statewide ballot measures that will appear on the Nov. 6 docket. The forum, sponsored by the League of Women Voters of Bellingham/Whatcom County, touched on three of the state's most hotly contested issues: marijuana (I-502), charter schools (I-1240) and marriage equality (Ref. 74). Initiative 502 League member Jill Bernstein moderated dueling speakers on Initiative Measure No. 502, which would legalize state-licensed marijuana for those over 21 years of age. Prominent local law enforcement, criminal justice and public heath professionals have endorsed I-502, including former U.S. Attorney for Western Washington John McKay and former Seattle Police Chief Norm Stamper. Sixteen Washington state legislators gave their approval of the legislation in May. Speaking in favor of the initiative, Dave Nichols, a retired Whatcom County Superior Court judge and longtime legalization advocate, characterized current drug policy as a cure far worse than the disease. "I sat on literally hundreds of drug cases and I can tell you after 20 years I am so fed up with those cases and how they gum up the courts," Nichols said. Possession of 40 grams or less of marijuana is a misdemeanor carrying a maximum penalty of 90 days in jail and a $1,000 fine, according to Washington state law. More than 40 grams is felony with a maximum 5-year sentence and $10,000 fine. Nichols said prosecuting marijuana pushes civil cases to the backburner, crowds prisons and burdens taxpayers. A 2012 Department of Corrections report puts the number of imprisoned drug offenders at 8.7 percent of the total 18,000 people in confinement in the state. During 2011, the cost per offender in prison and work release programs was about $100 per day, according to the Department of Corrections. Steve Sarich, manager and spokesman for the "No On 1-502" campaign, urged voters to reject the measure. Sarich represents users, growers and distributors of medicinal pot who say the initiative's D.U.I. provision exposes them to legal risk. More than five nanograms of active THC in a driver's blood would be considered legal impairment and result in conviction. I-502 opponents say medical users often surpass that. Sarich prefaced his opening statement with evidence to I-502's potential drawbacks for his fellow medical marijuana patients. "I'm sorry if I seem impaired this morning," Sarich said. "I wake up with four times the legal limit for impairment that is called for in I-502." The Office of Financial Management estimated I-502's D.U.I. provision would generate $4.259 million in fee revenue. If the initiative's proposed marijuana market did succeed, the office's report puts the potential state revenue from sales at $1.9 billion within the first five years. The total state revenue during fiscal year 2011 was $16 billion. Instead of unburdening the legal system, Sarich argued, the initiative would put more people in prison. "This law is all about the new strategy of the war on drugs," Sarich said. "It does not remove one single criminal penalty form the state law on marijuana. It just adds new ones that will criminalize thousands in the state of Washington." Referendum 74 Debating the referendum on marriage equality, state Rep. Kristine Lytton (D-40) squared off with Chip White, the communications director for Preserve Marriage Washington. Lytton represents an area including Whatcom, Skagit and San Juan counties. Urging voters to reject Ref. 74, Preserve Marriage Washington's White said a "redefinition" of marriage would violate the time-honored institution of marriage between one man and one woman. He also said businesses that oppose same-sex marriage would face economic hardship should Ref. 74 be approved. "The question is will business face serious negative consequences if marriage is redefined? The answer is yes," White said, citing the summer's widespread protests against Chick-Fil-A President Dan Cathy, after he openly opposed same-sex marriage. While the response of individual businesses is mixed, studies by the University of California, Los Angeles' The Williams Institute found same-sex marriages added up to $13 million to Iowa's economy within the first year. Seventy-six-year-old Marian Beddill was also in favor of same-sex marriage. Bedill, a transgender woman, said presenter White's depiction of gender was flawed. "He talks about tradition. He said that because [he thinks if] it is traditional, it is therefore right," Bedill said. "There are so many examples in the world and our nation that show history was wrong and we fixed it." In Massachusetts, where marriage equality has been legal since 2004, the institute found that as of 2009, same-sex marriages boosted the state's economy by $111 million. Lytton, who spoke in support of same-sex marriage, told the forum crown, which was largely comprised of elderly citizens, to consider future generations when voting on Ref. 74. A September poll by SurveyUSA for Seattle's King 5 TV found that 56 percent of surveyed voters would approve Ref. 74. Sixty-seven percent of 18-34 year olds support the measure, but the polls shows only 43 percent approval among those 65 and older. "My children are in their early 20s and they accept this very, very readily," Lytton said. "It's my generation, the older generation that have really struggled with this prospect." Initiative 1240 Rep. Lytton debated League of Educator Voters co-founder Lisa MacFarlane to discuss Initiative 1240, which would introduce public charter schools to Washington state. Although charter schools were created to address the needs of those student failed by the traditional education system, performance reviews have been mixed. Lytton referenced a 2009 Stanford study of 70 percent of charter school students that found only 17 percent of charter schools outperformed traditional public schools. Thirty-seven percent fared worse and 46 percent showed no difference. MacFarlane argued I-1240 is critical because low-income and English Language Learner students were more successful in charter schools. "They are not all perfect, but I feel some urgency about serving kids who are not making it today in our traditional public schools," MacFarlane said. Lytton said the school system should devote its energies to improving known problems in education instead of creating a parallel system. Lytton also cited concerns about the level of accountability charter schools have to publicly elected bodies. Charters can opt to be overseen by a local school board, (elected) or by a state commission (appointed). "You lose your voice with this initiative because it takes away local control and local decision making," Lytton said. "The only thing public about this is public money." Charter school initiatives have been defeated in Washington three times before, in 1996, 2000 and 2004. Despite its persistent presence on the ballot, some forum-goers left City Hall with lingering confusion about the charter issue. Louise Phillips drove 30 minutes from Custer to attend the meeting and admitted to leaving with "lots" of questions. "It wasn't what I though it was! I thought charter schools were for profit," she said. The League of Women Voters of Bellingham/Whatcom will sponsor three more public forums on candidates and ballot measures on Oct. 4, 11 and 13. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt