Source:   National Review
Contact:    Mon, 06 Oct 1997

* Opponents of HB3643 turn in almost twice the number of signatures needed
to force a 1998 ballot on the new marijuana penalty

By Ashbel S. Green, of the Oregonian staff

Opponents of a law that would recriminalize possession of small amounts of
marijuana said they turned in plenty of signatures Friday to force a vote
on the issue next year. 

Citizens for Sensible Law Enforcement said they turned in 95,032 signatures
to the state Elections Division, almost twice as many as the 48,841 valid
signatures needed to qualify a referendum for the 1998 generalelection
ballot and prevent the new law from taking effect today. 

State elections officials have 15 days to verify the signatures, but given
the number turned in, it appears almost certain there will be enough. 

"The odds of that thing making the ballot are quite favorable," said Scott
Tighe, state elections operations manger. 

That would give Oregonians the chance to vote on a marijuanarelated ballot
measure for the first time since 1986.

"There's a lot of jargon about being tough on crime. But you also have to
be smart," said Rep. Floyd Prozanski, DEugene.

Marijuana: Campaign cost about $100,000

Scarce money for law enforcement should be directed at violent criminals,
he said. "The reality is we don't have unlimited resources." 

But supporters of recriminalization were disappointed that House Bill 3643
probably will be suspended until the election. "I understand the cost
argument, but we have no bigger problem than drug use," said Rep. Ben
Westlund, RBend, a sponsor of the bill. "There is no higher cost to our
society." 

The referendum petition, submitted less than a year after California and
Arizona voters liberalized marijuana laws, puts Oregon in the middle of a
lively national debate about drug policy. 

The idea of liberalizing drug laws has been discussed for years on
latenight cable television programs and in magazines such as The National
Review and The Nation. 

But the debate reached mainstream America in 1996 when several wealthy
businessmen provided money to run professional campaigns for ballot
measures that legalized marijuana for medical use. 

Those men  including George Soros, an international financier; Peter
Lewis, an Ohio insurance executive; and John Sperling, a Phoenix
entrepreneur  financed the estimated $100,000 campaign to gather
signatures for the Oregon referendum. 

Next month, Washington voters will decide on a medical marijuana measure
financed mostly by Lewis and Sperling. 

With support from several other businessmen, similar measures are expected
to appear on state ballots, including Oregon's, in 1998. 

The last time marijuana appeared on the Oregon ballot, voters
overwhelmingly rejected an initiative to legalize its possession and growth
for personal use. 

The latest effort would have voters decide whether to maintain the status quo.

Since 1973, possession of less than 1 ounce of marijuana has been a
violation, which carries a $500 to $1,000 fine but no jail time. A
violation is similar to an infraction such as speeding or running a stop
sign. A police officer can write a ticket but not make an arrest. But the
1997 Legislature approved HB3643, which would raise possession of less than
1 ounce to a Class C misdemeanor. Conviction for a Class C misdemeanor
could result in a maximum fine of $1,000 and maximum jail time of 30 days,
although the bill would allow diversion instead of jail on the first
offense. An ounce is about enough to fill a standard plastic sandwich bag,
according to Portland police. 

Westlund and Prozanski cited personal experiences during the debate in the
Legislature. Westlund was arrested in 1982 for drunken driving and cocaine
possession, ironically by a police officer who is now a state legislator
and a sponsor of HB3643: Rep. John Minnis, RWood Village. Westlund, a
rancher and partowner of a minorleague baseball team, said the arrest
turned his life around.

"One of the best things that ever happened to me in my life was Officer
Minnis arresting me for drug possession," Westlund said.

But if Westlund had been smoking a joint on the corner, Minnis could only
have written him a ticket. 

HB3643 would allow police to arrest marijuana smokers and give them the
option of entering diversion to avoid jail time and a criminal conviction. 

When Prozanski was in high school in Texas, his sister's drug dealing
boyfriend murdered her.

But Prozanski, a municipal prosecutor in Lane County, said a $500 to $1,000
fine is more than adequate to deter marijuana use without further clogging
a congested court system. Prozanski said when voters in 1994 approved
tougher sentences for violent criminals, they sent a clear message about
their priorities. "We're losing sight of what we should be focusing on," he
said. 

Neither Westlund nor Prozanski was involved in the referendum campaign,
which has raised about $100,000.

Supporters of the recriminalization law face a more difficult fundraising
task. Darin Campbell, a lobbyist for the Oregon Association of Chiefs of
Police, said he is trying to persuade Oregon businesses to put up money to
fight the referendum and other potential ballot measures liberalizing drug
laws.