Pubdate: Tue, 03 Nov 1998 Source: Hawaii Tribune-Herald (HI) Contact: http://www.hilohawaiitribune.com/ Copyright: Hawaii Tribune Herald. Author: Hunter Bishop ISLAND VOTERS SUPPORT POT FOR MEDICAL USES - POLL Hawai'i voters overwhelmingly favor the use of marijuana for medical purposes, according to a recent statewide poll. Voters also strongly back the legalization of hemp, a less potent form of marijuana, to be grown for industrial uses in Hawai'i. Results of the public opinion poll were handed out in a press release last week by 'Ohana Aloha, an organization of "religious and medical practitioners of cannabis," said Big Island spokesman Roger Christie, a longtime advocate of marijuana. Jim Gonzalez, a former San Francisco supervisor, commissioned the public opinion poll. Gonzalez helped enact the nation's first medical marijuana initiative in San Francisco in 1991. Sixty-three percent of respondents in Hawai'i either said they "strongly" support or "somewhat" support the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes. Twenty-eight percent either are somewhat opposed or strongly opposed to it. Ten percent were undecided. Sixty-two percent of Hawai'i voters also favor industrial hemp, the poll shows, while 21 percent opposed industrial hemp. Almost 18 percent of the respondents said they are undecided. The polling firm of Fairbank, Maslin, Maullin and Associates, with offices in San Francisco and Oakland, Ca., conducted the telephone survey last month. Christie said GOP gubernatorial candidate Linda Lingle promised a Maui user of medical marijuana that she would support its legal use if a poll showed Hawaii's voters favor it. Lingle spokeswoman Kitty Lagareta denied the mayor made that promise, however, and said Lingle has not taken a position on industrial hemp or medical marijuana. "Those are not primary issues," Lagareta said. "If its helpful, she might consider medical marijuana," Lagareta said, "But she has taken no position." Gov. Cayetano has endorsed the development of industrial hemp in Hawai'i but has taken no position on medical marijuana, said the governor's spokeswoman Kathleen Racuya-Markrich. Voters in five states and the District of Columbia will be voting today on questions relating to legalizing marijuana for medical use. Hawai'i is not among them, however. Marijuana and hemp are illegal for any uses in Hawai'i. Christie, however, said the poll shows the "silent majority" of voters in Hawai'i support medical marijuana and industrial use of hemp by a margin of more than 2 to 1. Gonzalez now runs his own lobbying and public relations firm in Sacramento and represents, among other clients, Americans for Medical Rights, the group behind a successful medical marijuana initiative on the California ballot in 1996. "I had heard there was some debate in Hawai'i, and I decided to find out about it as an academic exercise," Gonzalez said. "I'm still looking at the analysis," Gonzalez said. "There is a lot for the legislators and the new governor, if there is one, to look at." Research associate Laurie Beijin of the polling firm said "definitely Hawai'i is very supportive of medical marijuana, more so than in some other states" where the firm has conducted polls. Four hundred respondents from throughout Hawai'i first were screened for their likelihood to vote in the general election, Beijin said. The poll, conducted September 30 to October 4, has a margin of error of 4.9 percent, Beijin said. - ---