Pubdate: Wed, 06 May 2015 Source: Arizona Daily Star (Tucson, AZ) Copyright: 2015 Arizona Daily Star Contact: http://www.azstarnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/23 Author: Howard Fischer, Capitol Media Services SPENDING PUBLIC FUNDS TO OPPOSE POT LEGALIZATION OK, BRNOVICH SAYS PHOENIX - Attorney General Mark Brnovich has cleared the way for public officials to use their offices and public resources to "educate" voters on why they believe marijuana should not be made legal. In a new formal opinion, Brnovich acknowledged there are laws prohibiting the use of public funds to influence the outcome of elections - a restriction he noted that applies even before a proposal has qualified for the ballot. But Brnovich said no law prohibits public education campaigns - even ones that are not fair and balanced. He said even one-sided arguments are permitted "so long as they do not unambiguously urge the electorate to cast a vote for or against the measure." The opinion is a significant victory for Yavapai County Attorney Sheila Polk. She is spearheading efforts to kill an initiative drive to allow the recreational use of marijuana. Polk has formed a political action committee to collect private donations to put out that message. She said Brnovich's opinion allows her to keep doing what she has been doing since before the initiative campaign was launched: Go out, on public time, and talk with voters about marijuana and making it legal. "If I'm doing a presentation on marijuana's harm, I will always get a question about legalization," she said. "This says I can answer that question." Polk said that means she can discuss what she sees as the experience in Colorado, which already legalized marijuana. "I can talk to them about what I see as the impact in Arizona if marijuana is legalized," she continued. "What I can't do is use that as a forum to say, 'If it's on the ballot, I am asking you to vote no.'" But Ryan Hurley, the attorney for the Marijuana Policy Project of Arizona, which is trying to put the issue before voters in 2016, said he believes Polk - or any other official - would be breaking the law by saying on public time the drug should not be legalized. "If they want to say in their opinion that marijuana might be harmful to society, maybe that's something that they can do," he said. But Hurley said the moment Polk or anyone says that marijuana legalization is a bad idea, "that's advocating a position on the initiative." "It's a fine line," Hurley conceded. "Certainly, the intent of what they're doing is going to become an important issue in this." How Hurley sees the issue versus how Polk does could lead to litigation. "The opposition on this issue has crossed the line in several other states," Hurley said. And he said it's an issue that legalization supporters are monitoring. "We certainly think they have better things to do than use public funds to influence the outcome of the election," he said. "We think the voters are smart enough to make that decision on their own." Polk, who has been at the forefront of efforts to spread the word about the dangers of marijuana, said she sees the legal opinion as giving her broad latitude. "I feel very comfortable I can continue to do what I've been doing as county attorney," she said. The ballot measure proposes to treat marijuana in a similar way to alcohol. Adults 21 and older would be permitted to purchase and use it from state-licensed stores, with the product subject to special luxury taxes. Backers have until July 7, 2016, to get 150,642 valid signatures on petitions to put the issue on the general election ballot that year. Brnovich based his opinion on a 2002 ruling from the state Court of Appeals involving efforts by the city of Tucson to hike its sales tax for transportation projects. Former state Rep. John Kromko sued, saying the materials the city distributed at public expense were biased. But the appellate court concluded the city had not crossed the line, saying the materials "provide information regarding the propositions, Tucson's traffic problems and the solutions proposed by the plan in such a way that a reasonable person might conclude that the city was educating the public on the issues, albeit in an entirely positive light." "This is not necessarily the same as an unambiguous urging of the electorate to vote in favor of the propositions," the ruling states. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom