Pubdate: Sun, 12 Oct 2014 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2014 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Marc Fisher, The Washington Post VOTE IN D.C. TO LEGALIZE POT NOT SO SIMPLE Washington - The campaigns for and against legalizing marijuana in the nation's capital are not exactly sophisticated - no targeted robo-calling, no TV commercials, no get-out-the-vote drive. The Yes side papers street lamp poles with signs that just say "Legalize." The No side counters with its simple slogan, "Two. Is. Enough. D.C.," meaning that legal alcohol and tobacco give Washingtonians all the mind-altering substances they need. D.C. voters will be asked Nov. 4 for a simple yes or no on legalizing marijuana, which the city decriminalized this year, replacing arrests and possible jail time with a $25 fine for possession of up to one ounce. But in the hazy world of marijuana law- an alternate reality in which Colorado and Washington have declared the substance legal even as it remains banned under federal law-nothing is simple. In the District, the contradictions get kicked up considerably: If the initiative passes, it would become legal to possess or grow small amounts of marijuana but not to sell or buy the stuff. The D.C. Council is talking about waiting months, or even a year, before taking the next step and passing a scheme to allow sales, taxes and regulation. In the meantime, even if Congress were to allow a Yes vote to stand, the city would become a place where having marijuana is legal but getting it requires illegal acts or a magical appearance of seeds or the finished product. That leaves even some of the most fervent opponents of marijuana prohibition wondering just what the ballot proposal might accomplish. Elsewhere, this fall's votes on marijuana policy would have real and swift impact. Alaska and Oregon voters will decide whether to make state-regulated sales legal, much as Colorado and Washington state have done. In Florida, the ballot includes a measure that would allow medical marijuana. Even though recent polls show a large majority of D.C. voters favor Initiative 71, "I don't expect Congress to sit back while the nation's capital legalizes marijuana," said council member Tommy Wells. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom