Pubdate: Fri, 15 May 2015 Source: Oregonian, The (Portland, OR) Copyright: 2015 The Oregonian Contact: http://www.oregonlive.com/oregonian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/324 Author: Leland R. Berger Note: Leland R. Berger is an attorney practicing statewide from inner Northeast Portland as Oregon CannaBusiness Compliance Counsel, LLC. He assisted in drafting the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act, Measure 91 and testified and lobbied for and against some of the reforms in SB844. ON POT REGULATION, LAWMAKERS SHOULD RESPECT THE WILL OF VOTERS During the 1999 legislative session, the House Judiciary Committee was assigned the task of legislation implementing the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act. Chair Kevin Mannix, R-Salem, assembled a work group of proponents and opponents of the initiative. Ultimately a bill passed which addressed and resolved problems caused by unanticipated drafting issues. During that session, a House Joint Memorial was assigned to the committee recommending to Congress that marijuana be rescheduled from Schedule I of the federal Controlled Substances Act because it has therapeutic value. The committee sent the bill to the floor of the House for a vote, notwithstanding Chair Mannix's opposition to marijuana law reform. He allowed this to happen because he understood that Article IV of our state's Constitution makes the people a co-extensive branch of the Legislature when they directly enact legislation through the initiative process. He respected the will of the people even though he disagreed with it. Ballot Measure 91, which passed in 2014, legalizes the possession of one ounce of marijuana in private anywhere in Oregon and the cultivation of four plants at home, with additional possession limits on marijuana and marijuana products at home effective July 1 of this year. It also requires the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to accept applications for production, processing, wholesale and retail licenses for adult use on Jan. 4, 2016. And four times in the initiative it directs in clear and unambiguous language that the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act is to be left alone. Notwithstanding this language, the Joint Committee Implementing Measure 91 took up a bill, SB844, to reform and regulate the Medical Marijuana Act. The bill has died, at least for the moment, because of a split on the committee on the issue of whether allowing municipalities to ban safe access to medical marijuana at state-licensed medical marijuana dispensaries should require a popular vote on the municipalities' decision to ban prior to it taking effect. This is the third time the Legislature has dealt with the question of "local control." The first was in the legislative discussion of the law that created medical marijuana dispensaries, HB3460. That municipal regulation is limited to reasonable time, place and manner restrictions and that there is no legislative authority to ban was implicit in that bill. The second was when the League of Cities and the Association of Counties came to the Legislature seeking authority to ban. The Legislature allowed a one-year moratorium, from May 1 of last year to May 1 of this year, to give municipalities adequate time to enact reasonable time, place and manner restrictions. Now they have come back again, again seeking authority to ban and insisting that local governments be authorized to act without the consent of the governed. We have had the initiative in our state Constitution for over 100 years. It was added because the Legislature was not responsive to the concerns of the electorate. The disregard of the joint committee to the will of the people with regard to Measure 91's requirement of legislative non-interference with the Medical Marijuana Act is tremendously disappointing. But even if the proposed reforms to the Medical Marijuana Act were all appropriate, the committee's inability to move the bill because a majority of legislators oppose requiring municipal governments to seek the approval of those who elected them prior to banning dispensaries - thereby denying safe access to state registered medical marijuana patients - is appalling. Legislators need to show the kind of statesmanship in addressing Measure 91 that Kevin Mannix showed regarding medical marijuana and respect the will of the voters, even if they disagree with it. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom