Pubdate: Wed, 24 Feb 2016 Source: Lodi News-Sentinel (CA) Copyright: 2016 Lodi News-Sentinel Contact: https://lodinews-dot-com.bloxcms.com/site/forms/online_services/letter/ Website: http://www.lodinews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1419 Author: Phil Willon, Los Angeles Times ONLY ONE OF CALIFORNIA'S POT LEGALIZATION INITIATIVES HAS THE GREEN THAT COUNTS SACRAMENTO - Devout cannabis advocates and social justice reformers believe this may finally be the year California voters legalize marijuana, and that optimism has led to a mashup of proposed statewide ballot measures - more than 20 filed so far. They vary from a one-sentence constitutional amendment that simply declares California adults are free to "grow, own (and) purchase" marijuana to a 62-page treatise on how to best regulate and tax legal pot. But just one has attracted the deep-pocketed donors and leading advocacy groups to emerge as the clear favorite to make the November ballot - the so-called Adult Use of Marijuana Act. The initiative would allow those age 21 and older to possess and use up to an ounce of marijuana, making California the fifth state in the nation to legalize recreational use. The measure's stature is in no small part thanks to the backing of former Facebook president and Napster cofounder Sean Parker, who has donated $1 million of the $2.25 million raised by the campaign. The initiative's bankroll dwarfs the funds collected by rival marijuana initiative campaigns and has prompted a few to abandon efforts because they lacked the money to compete. Momentum behind the Parker-backed initiative was further strengthened by an endorsement from Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom. The 2018 Democratic gubernatorial hopeful chaired a blue-ribbon commission to determine the best way to legalize marijuana in California while still limiting children's access, targeting illegal activity and regulating the drug's cultivation and sale. "We stood down. Basically, he sucked all the funding oxygen out of the air, and we were left high and dry," Dale Gieringer, director of the state chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said of the Parker donations, tongue firmly in cheek. Still, these groups take it seriously. "I'd describe it as a hostile buyout by a billionaire ... so small growers are going to be in real trouble," Gieringer added. Gieringer was involved in a competing marijuana initiative sponsored by the Coalition for Cannabis Policy Reform, also known as ReformCA. The group suspended its campaign in December after some of its board members opted to join with the Parker-backed initiative. Of the 20 separate ballot measures to legalize marijuana or expand protections for medical marijuana users and suppliers, six already have failed to qualify, and supporters of four others have, in effect, abandoned their efforts. None yet have qualified for the ballot. Lynne Lyman, California director of the Drug Policy Alliance, said her organization held more than 100 consultation meetings with local governments, law enforcement agencies, environmental leaders and the cannabis industry as it drafted a version of the legalization. It ultimately joined forces with Parker, who for years has been one of its generous financial supporters. "It was rough and tumble politics - 2015 was not easy for any of us," Lyman said. "But in the end, what came out of that was the best initiative to have ever been drafted." The California chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People also abandoned its legalization measure. Alice Huffman, president of the civil rights organization, said after getting "scooped by the Parker initiative" she decided to join his effort, and negotiated for changes to address the NAACP's top priorities: to end the arrest of thousands of nonviolent cannabis users and to resentence those already convicted of marijuana crimes that would be reduced or rescinded under the initiative. "I'm not advocating for the use of marijuana. I'm advocating for social justice," Huffman said. "They gave us the five or six things we asked for." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom