Pubdate: Thu, 24 Sep 2015 Source: La Crosse Tribune (WI) Copyright: 2015 The La Crosse Tribune Contact: http://www.lacrossetribune.com/app/forms/sendletter/ Website: http://www.lacrossetribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/229 Author: Cassie Colson, Jackson County Chronicle HO-CHUNK NATION LOOKS TO LEGALIZE MARIJUANA The Ho-Chunk Nation may look to legalize marijuana on its tribal lands. The tribe's electorate voted in favor of the move at a Saturday General Council meeting by a 2-1 margin. Votes at the annual meeting of tribal members are not binding, and the tribe now is studying the legal implications of the possible policy change. "The vote overturns previous policy refusing to legalize marijuana. During the session, tribal members spoke of the health benefits and that drug addiction already a problem in the communities," said Collin Price, the tribe's public relations officer. "The resolution passed does not legalize marijuana or the sale of marijuana on tribal lands. Ho-Chunk Nation officials and attorneys are researching the legal implications." A total of 1,607 Ho-Chunk Nation members 18 and older cast votes on the resolution at the meeting held in Madison. Sixty-three percent (1,013) voted in favor of legalizing marijuana, just under 34 percent (544) voted no and another 3.1 percent (50) abstained. The tribe's vote comes after an October 2014 memo released by the U.S. Department of Justice that said federal authorities should look to work with Native American tribes that look to legalize marijuana. The memo did caution, however, that enforcement would remain a top priority in eight scenarios, including distribution to minors and cases of operating under the influence. The Menominee tribe in northeast Wisconsin earlier this year voted in favor of the possibility of legalizing marijuana for recreational and medicinal use on its reservation near Shawano. Price said the tribe's leadership will provide additional information in light of the vote in the coming weeks. "With it being so soon after the resolution, we haven't had time to discuss this in great detail," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom