Source: Seattle Times (WA) Contact: Website: http://www.seattletimes.com/ Pubdate: 20 Aug 98 Author: David Schaefer Seattle Times staff reporter MARIJUANA INITIATIVES BLOOM AROUND WEST When Washington voters decide in November whether to legalize the use of marijuana for relief of cancer and other debilitating illnesses, they won't be alone. Voters in Oregon, Alaska, Nevada and, potentially, Colorado will cast ballots on nearly identical measures. That's no accident: Nearly all the money and much of the political horsepower behind Initiative 692 and similar proposals elsewhere is being provided by the California-based Americans for Medical Rights. That group is principally supported by three wealthy businessmen: billionaire global financier George Soros; John Sperling, founder of the for-profit University of Phoenix; and Peter Lewis, chief executive officer of Ohio-based Progressive Insurance. They have donated nearly all of the $300,000 raised so far by the Initiative 692 campaign. They were also the financial backers for last year's unsuccessful medical-marijuana initiative campaign, which lost handily despite spending $1.5 million. But Initiative 692 isn't a rerun of last year's measure, which would have legalized an array of drugs and potentially reduced the jail sentence of convicted drug users. The current version is focused much more narrowly on marijuana use. It would allow people with certain diseases to grow and use marijuana with a doctor's recommendation. The measure would cover those suffering from certain AIDS symptoms, nausea caused by chemotherapy, muscle spasms caused by multiple sclerosis, epilepsy, glaucoma or other illnesses causing "intractable" pain. "We are not trying to legalize drugs," said Initiative 692 organizer Rob Killian. "It is just (about) marijuana and just for sick people." Killian, a Seattle-area doctor, also was the leader of last year's campaign. He said he has seen the benefits of marijuana on his own terminal patients and AIDS sufferers. The most prominent opponents are King County Prosecutor Norm Maleng and Lt. Gov. Brad Owen, who both worked against last year's measure. Maleng said relieving the suffering of seriously ill patients should be addressed through the stringent clinical tests required by the federal government, not by an "end run" around the drug laws. Owen said he is concerned that medical marijuana is a stalking-horse for decriminalization of other drugs. He said the agenda of the three main donors goes far beyond prescribing marijuana for cancer patients. "The first step to legalizing drugs is to accept medical marijuana," Owen argues. "Soros has spoken out for changing national drug policy. That is the real purpose." Soros has criticized the severity of U.S. drug-use laws, donating millions to study and promote reforms. But Americans for Medical Rights is solely interested in the issue of legalizing marijuana for medical use, said spokesman Dave Fratello. The group is focused on the West because 20 of the 24 states that allow voters to write laws by initiative are west of the Mississippi. Americans for Medical Rights conducted polls in 10 states, concentrating its political efforts this year on those that looked the most promising. They also are relatively small states, where it is less expensive to conduct a campaign. The group, which passed the California initiative in 1996, provides financial, technical and legal assistance to the local campaigns. Should this year's initiatives prove successful, the group likely will sponsor ballot measures in Ohio, Illinois and Florida in the next two years, Fratello said. There are minor differences among the current crop of proposals. For example, Washington's initiative calls for medical patients to be allowed to keep a 60-day supply of marijuana. Colorado would allow patients to possess 2 ounces of harvested marijuana and six total plants, of which three are flowering. Oregon would allow seven plants, including three that were flowering. The Alaska, Oregon and Colorado initiatives would create a permit system, which would provide identification cards for patients eligible to use marijuana. Washington calls only for documentation from a doctor, similar to a prescription. Initiative 692 would allow a caregiver to have access to marijuana or help the patient with its cultivation. No caregiver could help more than one patient or legally use the drug themselves. None of the proposals would allow the controversial "buying clubs," where the sick can buy marijuana, established in California. - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake