Pubdate: Tue, 07 Oct 2014 Source: Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) Copyright: 2014 Sun-Sentinel Company Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/mVLAxQfA Website: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/159 Author: Dan Sweeney Page: 1A MARIJUANA FIGHT HITS TV, STREETS Coming soon to a TV near you: anti-pot ads. Coming to a parking lot near you: a pro-pot bus. As Election Day draws nearer, the two sides of the medical marijuana debate have diverged in how they're getting out the message. Drug Free Florida, the primary group fighting Amendment 2, will be running television ads across the state. People United for Medical Marijuana will be driving a bus around the same territory. The fact Drug Free Florida had about $3 million in September, while People United had just a few hundred grand had a lot to do with their choices. "We hope to continue raising awareness and having a conversation with voters," said Ben Pollara, the campaign manager of People United. "Our basic proposition from the beginning of this has been that the more we talk about this issue, the more support we'll have." Drug Free Florida, backed by an initial $2.5 million from Las Vegas casino mogul Sheldon Adelson, recently spent more than $1.7 million on a statewide television ad buy. The latest campaign finance records, which cover the period through Sept. 26, show Adelson dropped another $1.5 million into Drug Free Florida's bank account on Sept. 25, essentially refilling the money exhausted in the ad buy. "We are very grateful and appreciative of the support of all of our donors," said Drug Free Florida spokeswoman Sarah Bascom. "This is a worthy cause for the future of Florida." People United, which raised more money than the anti-medical marijuana folks just to get Amendment 2 on the ballot, is down to its last $600,000. Hence the bus tour, which is considerably cheaper than a statewide ad buy. On Wednesday and Thursday, the Amendment 2 bus will hit rallies and debates in Hallandale Beach, Delray Beach, Boca Raton, Miami and Miami Gardens. Drug Free Florida isn't landing a bus anywhere anytime soon, but Bascom says the campaign has a lot more to it than just TV ads. "We have been focusing on our own grassroots methods, for example we have a strong digital and online effort," she said. They also have the eighth-richest man in the world backing them. But People United has the backing of John Morgan, a Central Florida attorney who, while a far cry from Adelson, has sunk $4 million into the Amendment 2 campaign as well. "The $4 million he's put into this campaign is chump change to him. He sneezes $4 million," Pollara said of Adelson. "I don't know how much John feels $4 million, but he's said all along that he'll do what he needs to do to win." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom