Pubdate: Wed, 12 Aug 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: Lynn Hulsey PRO-POT GROUP CLOSES IN ON GOAL Ballot Threshold for Legalization Initiative May Have Been Hit. This newspaper's tally of nearly half of the new petitions turned in by ResponsibleOhio shows backers of a constitutional amendment to legalize marijuana in Ohio likely will exceed the threshold required to place the issue on the November ballot. A survey of 13 of Ohio's 88 county boards of election - including five of the largest - found they had validated 42 percent of the new signatures of registered voters turned in by the pro-legalization group ResponsibleOhio. At that rate, the group needs less than 20 percent of the remaining 48,363 signatures being considered by the state's other 75 counties to be validated to meet the threshold required to be on the ballot. ResponsibleOhio in July turned in petitions with 276,082 valid signatures, falling 29,509 short of what was required. State law allows a second chance to collect enough, so on July 30 the group turned in another 95,572 signatures. It needs 31 percent of them to be valid for the marijuana issue to make the ballot. WBNS-10TV of Columbus reported Tuesday that it had surveyed 48 counties and found that preliminary totals exceeded that figure. Tuesday was the deadline for boards to complete their review and send results to Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted. Jennifer Redman, spokeswoman for ResponsibleOhio, said "we feel good about it," but the group is waiting to get official news from Husted, who is expected to announce the final tally of valid signatures by the end of the week. "I can't confirm any signature totals," said Joshua Eck, spokesman for Ohio Secretary of State. "Anything that is out there now is media-generated and not at all rooted in the actual certification, which will be done by the Secretary of State alone." He also said that Husted's special investigation of the first round of petitions turned in by the group is ongoing. Husted said the group claimed more signatures than it submitted and there were discrepancies between hard-copy petitions turned in by the group and what were to be identical electronic copies. Ian James, ResponsibleOhio executive director, earlier said elections officials failed to count 40,000 names and improperly invalidated at least 21,000. He threatened to file a complaint with the Ohio Supreme Court, but it appears the deadline to do so has passed, according to information provided by Eck. If the latest signatures pass, the required threshold the investigation would not keep the issue off the ballot, Eck said. "The investigation is entirely separate from the signature validation." This newspaper surveyed Butler, Warren, Greene, Montgomery, Champaign, Miami, Clark, Darke, Preble, Cuyahoga, Franklin, Hamilton and Lucas county boards of election. Those boards reviewed 47,209 signatures, finding 58 percent were invalid and 42 percent were valid, mirroring the statewide percentages of the first round of petitions submitted by ResponsibleOhio. The Dayton Area Chamber of Commerce will make an announcement today regarding the ResponsibleOhio initiative, chamber officials announced. In May, the chamber surveyed its members about their opinions on legalizing marijuana in Ohio for recreational or medical use as the business organization considered taking a stance on the controversial issue. ResponsibleOhio's plan calls for naming 10 properties, owned by backers of the group, as the only sites where marijuana could be manufactured in large indoor grow facilities in Ohio. The six-question survey sent to members was in response to an increase in businesses inquiring about the chamber's position on the issue, said Dayton chamber president and CEO Phil Parker. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom