Pubdate: Wed, 17 Jun 2015 Source: Dayton Daily News (OH) Copyright: 2015 Dayton Daily News Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/7JXk4H3l Website: http://www.daytondailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/120 Author: Laura A. Bischoff MARIJUANA EFFORT IN OHIO TO FACE CHALLENGE Lawmakers Move to Block Pot Legalization Plan Even If It Passes. State lawmakers are taking steps to block groups from installing private property rights in the Ohio Constitution - much like the casino owners did and the advocates for legalizing marijuana want to do this fall - and legal experts are predicting that the move will invite legal challenges. The Ohio House is expected to vote as early as next week and the Senate soon after on a resolution to put a constitutional amendment on the November ballot. If Ohio voters approve the amendment,it would block the marijuana legalization plan that is expected to also be on the ballot - even if voters say yes to legal marijuana,according to the resolution. ResponsibleOhio,a group of deep pocketed investors and political consultants, is now gathering 305,591 valid voter signatures for a constitutional amendment to legalize medical and recreational marijuana and name 10 sites controlled by its investors as the only places where pot could be manufactured. The investors are funding the campaign,which is expected to cost $25 million. ResponsibleOhio Executive Director Ian James said in a written statement: "These politicians trusted the voters enough to elect them,but when faced with an issue they disagree with, lawmakers want to deny voters the right to decide. No other state has done this; no other state has passed a constitutional amendment to limit voters' rights. In this zealous attempt to stop marijuana legalization,lawmakers are also leading an unenviable effort that will protect drug dealers and the black market. Unlike Statehouse lawmakers,we trust voters. We urge the legislature to let the voters decide. Let people vote." The House amendment would prohibit the creation of a monopoly or special interest,benefit or license for an individual,group or business that isn't otherwise made available to similarly situated entities. A business interest could get an exemption by asking voters to grant an exception and then going back to the voters for approval for its constitutional amendment. The House proposed language also says that if voters approve a constitutional amendment on Nov. 3,2015 that conflicts with the House plan,"that entire constitutional amendment shall not take effect." "If both measures were to pass,I would anticipate that the matter would be litigated and ultimately decided by the courts," said Dan Tierney,spokesman for Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine. Doug Berman,an Ohio State University law professor who teaches a course on marijuana law and public policy,said he believes if both pass,there will be lots of litigation over which would take effect and whether making it more difficult for certain groups to propose a constitutional amendment would be upheld by the courts. "Yes,we're going to get litigation. Yes,we're going to get confusion. Yes, we're going to get challenges of all sorts. But these are important conversations to be having - both about the substance of should we reform our marijuana laws at all and what is arguably the best way to go about doing that?" Berman said. "And good,bad or indifferent, that's the conversation we are all now having. Again, what I would say is it's a shame the Legislature wasn't having this conversation a year ago because then it could be an orderly,sensible statutory conversation,rather than what has now become a seemingly disorderly, noisy,throw a bunch of ideas at the wall and see what sticks conversation. But I guess democracy is often messy." ResponsibleOhio's plan calls for allowing adults ages 21 and older to possess up to one ounce of marijuana and home grown up to four mature plants,naming 10 manufacturing sites where roughly 538,000 pounds of pot would be produced each year,allowing local voters to approve opening retail stores in their areas and establishing a regulatory commission to oversee the industry. Tax revenues from marijuana production and sales would be split between local and state governments. Although marijuana is an illegal drug under federal law,23 states allow for medical marijuana and four of those plus the District of Columbia allow for recreational use of weed. State political leaders, including House Speaker Cliff Rosenberger,Gov. John Kasich,Secretary of State Jon Husted,Attorney General Mike DeWine and Auditor Dave Yost,oppose ResponsibleOhio's plan. Senate President Keith Faber,R-Celina,said lawmakers want to stop entities from installing private property rights into the state constitution, such as naming locations for growing marijuana or building casinos. "All of those things are bad long-term public policy for Ohio. It's allowing people who have a lot of money to try to buy the constitution. We think it's wrong. We're going to try to take a look at that," Faber said. The casinos would not be impacted by the November 2015 amendments. The resolution,which began hearings in the House Government Accountability and Oversight Committee,must get a three-fifths majority vote in both the House and Senate by early August to make the November ballot. Berman said the conservative Ohio General Assembly has largely ignored the fast-moving issue of marijuana reform, even after ResponsibleOhio debuted its plans six months ago. If lawmakers had adopted a medical marijuana bill months ago,it likely would have blunted ResponsibleOhio's plans,he said. "If the General Assembly thinks this is going to somehow stop the robust nationwide or local conversation about marijuana reform,they're the ones smoking it. All it's going to do is delay it and divert it," Berman said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom