Pubdate: Thu, 05 May 2016 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2016 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.mercurynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Aaron Kinney POT MEASURE ON BALLOT Nov. 8 Initiative Would Authorize 15 % Tax on Retail Sales Ofmarijuana in California SAN FRANCISCO - California voters will decide again this November whether to decriminalize the recreational use of marijuana by adults, Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Wednesday, calling the looming vote a "pivotal moment" in the national debate around pot legalization and the 45-year-old war on drugs. Newsom and other leaders of a coalition behind the Adult Use of Marijuana Act announced they have collected enough signatures to place on the Nov. 8 ballot a measure that would make it legal for adults 21 and older to possess, sell or transport up to an ounce of pot. California voters rejected a similar measure in 2010. At a news conference Wednesday in San Francisco, members of the coalition - including the California NAACP and a former deputy chief with the Los Angeles Police Department - offered several arguments for the measure, from crime and racial justice to the environment and personal liberty. Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, RCosta Mesa, said the proposal is a matter of freedom and fiscal responsibility. "I can't think of a bigger waste of government money than to try to use it to control the private lives of adults," said the congressman, who worked under President Ronald Reagan when he made his famous 1987 speech in front of the Berlin Wall. "The walls of cannabis prohibition and this tyranny that our people have faced is coming down. Join us in tearing down this wall." The campaign for the initiative raised about $2.7 million for the signature-gathering drive, said spokesman Jason Kinney with support from Sean Parker, the billionaire veteran of Napster and Facebook. The measure needs about 366,000 signatures to qualify, and advocates said they have submitted roughly 600,000. The initiative would impose a 15 percent tax on all retail sales of marijuana, generating hundreds of millions of dollars in government revenue. Most of the money would be dedicated to youth drug prevention and treatment, the rest distributed to various programs including law enforcement training, cleaning up environmental damage wrought by illegal pot farms and, in Newsom's words, "the most comprehensive research that will have ever been done on marijuana in this nation." The law would include restrictions to protect minors, including a ban on advertising that targets youths and regulations on how edible weed is packaged and marketed. Newsom said he personally "can't stand" marijuana consumption but is bothered by the impact of pot criminalization on minorities, who are incarcerated at higher rates than whites, and young people who make dumb mistakes. "You do not have to be pro-marijuana to be prolegalization," Newsom said. "We are not promoting something that is not already ubiquitous in the state of California. Survey after survey, our kids say the same thing: It is easier to get marijuana than it is to get alcohol." Dr. Donald Abrams, chief of hematology and oncology at San Francisco General Hospital, said legalizing marijuana, as long as there are strict controls to protect adolescents, will improve public health in California. "The war on drugs is much more detrimental to the health of our country and our people than cannabis," said Abrams, who has researched medicinal cannabis since 1997, a year after California voters passed the nation's first medical pot law. But there will be opposition. Carla Lowe, founder of Citizens Against Legalizing Marijuana, said she worries about the effects of marijuana, which is far more potent than it was in 1971 when President Richard Nixon launched the war on drugs. "This stuff is damaging our kids' brains," she said. "This does not bode well for a strong, healthy, productive America." Lowe campaigned six years ago against Proposition 19, which was rejected by 53.5 percent of voters. But the public mood may have shifted. A 2015 poll by the Public Policy Institute of California found 55 percent of likely voters would support pot legalization. On Wednesday, the Bay Area Council announced that a new poll of Bay Area residents found that 50 percent support legalizing the recreational use of marijuana in California as called for in the Adult Use of Marijuana Act, which would require a simple majority to pass. The Bay Area Council Poll was conducted by Oakland-based public opinion research firm EMC Research from Feb. 12 to March 9, and surveyed more than 1,000 residents online about a range of issues. It has a margin of error of 3.1 percentage points. If approved, California would join Alaska, Colorado, Oregon and Washington in legalizing recreational pot. The initiative would permit adults to grow up to six plants in their homes as long as they are out of public view and not accessible by children. Using marijuana in public and driving while high would remain illegal, and employers would be given latitude to ban nonmedical marijuana use by employees. Local governments would have the authority to ban commercial marijuana activity and enact other restrictions. The 15 percent excise tax would apply to marijuana for both recreational and medical use. But medical marijuana would be exempt from sales taxes. Though more than a dozen other groups indicated they would explore placing a measure on the 2016 ballot, it's highly likely the Adult Use of Marijuana Act will be the only one for voters to ponder this fall, Kinney said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom