Pubdate: Tue, 09 Feb 2016 Source: Dayton Daily News (OH) Copyright: 2016 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 MEDICAL MARIJUANA PLAN FOR OHIO PITCHED Goal Is to Get Funds to Collect Valid Voter Signatures. A team of veteran political operatives put out a 22-page proposal that offers up its political talent to help weed business interests with deep pockets take a run at putting a medical marijuana question before Ohio voters in November. Calling itself ARC Reaction, the group includes Democrat Aaron Pickrell, who was a senior policy adviser in the Strickland administration, Republican Mike Hartley, who served as a senior staffer in the Kasich administration, and Democrat Steven Stenberg, a Washington, D.C.-based direct mail and political strategist. ARC Reaction is looking for investors to pony up $300,000 by Feb. 15 for initial research and chip in another $1.5 million by March 1 and $3.5 million more by April 1 to collect the 305,000 valid voter signatures required by early July to qualify for the statewide ballot. Pickrell declined to comment on the plan. ARC Reaction proposes putting together an "industry table" that would fund and craft the initiative. "Write the law - as YOU see fit. If this table is first to the space, we take the lead in crafting the initiative AND the regulatory framework for implementation. Guided by polling, we will work with the table to find the best strategy that fits electorally and from a lobbying perspective," it says. The proposal emerges just as Marijuana Policy Project, a national advocacy group, is taking a look at launching a medical marijuana ballot issue in Ohio and the General Assembly explores how it wants to tailor a medical marijuana law. Just three months ago, Ohio voters soundly rejected a proposed constitutional amendment to legalize marijuana for medical and recreational purposes and grant exclusive cultivation rights to the 10 investor groups that were bankrolling the campaign. Issue 3 failed by nearly a 2 to 1 ratio. But polls show widespread support for adult use of medical marijuana. Indeed, 23 states already have some sort of comprehensive medical marijuana program. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom