Pubdate: Fri, 28 Jun 2013 Source: Arizona Daily Star (Tucson, AZ) Contact: 2013 Arizona Daily Star Website: http://www.azstarnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/23 Author: Tim Steller DRIVE TO LEGALIZE POT IN 2014 IS A LONG SHOT Dennis Bohlke insists there's no time to wait. Many people in the anti-prohibition movement are looking toward 2016 as the year Arizona voters should consider an initiative to legalize marijuana for personal, nonmedical use. But Bohlke, of Phoenix, is pushing for a vote in 2014. He took out petitions June 11 and filed a seven-page proposed constitutional amendment with the secretary of state. That leaves him and a loosely organized band of volunteers with a huge challenge: collecting 259,213 valid signatures by July 3, 2014, to put the initiative on next year's general-election ballot. It may seem there's plenty of time, with a year to go, but in fact the challenge is huge: 696 valid signatures per day. And, frankly, it is likely insurmountable. That's because the interest-group machinery, complete with funders and organizational support, is cranking into gear on a different time frame. "I sympathize with that feeling of urgency, but I think success will come easier in 2016," said Tucsonan Jon Gettels, who is president of AZ4NORML, the state branch of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. Gettels added that he'll support Bohlke's initiative - he just doesn't hold out much hope for its passage. I asked Bohlke why try now, and his answer was simple: "17,000 people being arrested in Arizona every year for marijuana possession." Bohlke, 59, said he was arrested twice three years ago, once for possession of marijuana, once for driving impaired by marijuana. He was acquitted of the possession charge but convicted of the DUI charge, in what he feels was an unfair outcome. "What does a citizen do?" he asked. His answer is to go for legalization now. The initiative he's written is modeled after the one Colorado voters passed in 2012, which legalized the possession and use of an ounce of marijuana. However, Bohlke's initiative differs in one key respect: Colorado's law permits marijuana use by those 21 and older, whereas Bohlke's initiative would allow it for those at least 18 years old. If the Safer Arizona initiative, as Bohlke named it, ever makes the ballot, that age limit alone will bring out strong opposition. I sent the language to Tucson Police Chief Roberto Villasenor, and he said this in a statement: "A particularly troubling aspect of this initiative is that it sets the acceptable age for use of marijuana to 18 (voting age) which is even less restrictive than the regulations concerning alcohol, which prohibit its use until 21. If passed, this initiative will place an even greater number of immature young adults behind the wheel of a motor vehicle after legally consuming a substance that impairs their judgment and motor skills." Another part of the initiative sure to draw the ire of police is its regulation of evidence of driving while impaired by marijuana. Evidence of impairment gained from sobriety tests, the initiative says, "can only be presented as admissible evidence in court when accompanied with video records of such tests." Bohlke traveled the marijuana trail in Arizona in preparing the initiative, taking feedback from people in marijuana-legalization groups and medical-pot organizations. The impairment issue is big, he said, because evidence of THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, remains in the body for days or weeks after the high has gone and is not evidence of impairment in itself. "The initiative, in a lot of ways, is written for marijuana users, because that is the base," he said. If he can motivate them to get enough signatures - now there's an interesting challenge - he's thinking it will be a separate issue selling the ballot measure to voters in November 2014. People in the increasingly formal marijuana business sector tend to sympathize with Bohlke but don't see it happening next year. When I asked Mason Tvert, communications director of the nationwide Marijuana Policy Project, about this initiative, he said, "We know of it. We're not involved in it though. "Getting an initiative on the ballot typically is very expensive," Tvert said. "We feel that any initiative effort should be carried out in 2016, when we know more voters will turn out." For those of us who question the wisdom of marijuana prohibition, it's hard to wait. Arizona voters first approved medical-marijuana in 1996 and it only recently became available for purchase. Change is happening much faster now, but pushing legalization to 2014 may be a step too fast. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom