Pubdate: Tue, 21 Jul 2015 Source: Columbus Dispatch (OH) Copyright: 2015 The Columbus Dispatch Contact: http://www.dispatch.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/93 Author: Alan Johnson POT-PETITION SIGNATURES FALL SHORT Backers of a for-profit marijuana-legalization amendment remain confident the issue will be on the November ballot, but they are turning to the Ohio Supreme Court to make sure. Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted's office reported on Monday that ResponsibleOhio's petition fell 29,509 valid signatures of registered Ohio voters short of the 305,591 needed to qualify for the Nov. 3 ballot. Husted's tally from boards of elections showed 276,082 valid signatures statewide, which was 39.7 percent of the 695,273 signatures from 72 counties submitted on June 30. ResponsibleOhio's executive director, Ian James, said his group will go to the Supreme Court to challenge the status of about 40,000 signatures on the petition that he said are "unaccounted for" or were improperly tossed out in the tally released by Husted. "Every single voter who signed this petition has the right to be counted. We will be taking these shortfalls to the Supreme Court to ensure that those thousands of voices are heard," James said. State law was changed in 2013 to channel appeals of petition issues directly to the Supreme Court. Husted spokesman Matt McClellan called "nonsense" the idea that not all signatures were processed. "We sent out 90 boxes (to boards of election) and we got 90 boxes back. We processed everything that was submitted to us." ResponsibleOhio won't count on the Supreme Court appeal, James said, and will put 200 people to work during a 10-day "cure period" to gather the necessary signatures to fill the gap. Additional names must be submitted to the secretary of state by July 30 and verified by county elections boards. Boards of election officials around the state who reviewed the signatures said most were thrown out because signers listed the wrong address, were not registered, didn't list any address, used a false or illegible signature, or left lines blank. If approved by Ohio voters, the ballot issue would legalize the commercial growth of marijuana at 10 preselected sites owned by wealthy investors, and growth in very small quantities by individuals at home. Marijuana and its products would be sold at 1,150 retail locations and at medical dispensaries. Sales would be taxed at all levels. An anti-monopoly issue passed by the state legislature will appear on the Nov. 3 ballot. If approved, that issue could cancel out the ResponsibleOhio proposal by banning any amendment that establishes an economic monopoly in the Ohio Constitution. Elise Spriggs, a Columbus attorney representing a bipartisan coalition opposing the marijuana plan, said the signature shortfall reflects "shoddy work" by ResponsibleOhio. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom