US NV: Marijuana Gaining Support

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Carson City. NV - Buoyed by the approval of a similar measure by Denver voters, marijuana proponents say they're growing more confident about the chances for success next year of a Nevada ballot initiative that would allow adults to possess an ounce of pot.

Neal Levine, leader of Citizens to Regulate and Control Marijuana, said he thinks the Nov. 1 vote to legalize marijuana in Denver in a sign that "the mainstream" electorate now supports adults' private use of pot.

The Denver ballot measure, approved by a 54 percent to 47 percent vote, allows people 21 and older to possess up to an ounce of marijuana.

Because of a successful petition drive by Levine's group last year, Nevadans will be faced with a similar question on the November 2006 election ballot.

Levine said the initiative is far more restrictive than a November 2002 ballot measure that was shot down by a wide margin in Nevada.

That proposal called for the legalization of 3 ounces, three times more than the current initiative.

"We have been working in the state since 2001 and talking to Nevada people every day," Levine told the Las Vegas Review-Journal. "It is based on what people have told us they would like to see.

"We talked to real people and have come up with a solution. People are going to use marijuana regardless. The current laws don't work."

Washoe County District Attorney Dick Gammick was hoarse and unable to talk Saturday. Assistant District Attorney John Helzer didn't immediately return a phone call.

But many law enforcement authorities from across the state spoke out against the marijuana proposal when it was debated at the Legislature in March.

At the hearing, Assembly Speaker Richard Perkins said that as a deputy police chief he had arrested many people who committed crimes while under the influence of marijuana.

"Does this committee, this Legislature want to send a message to our youth that using a drug is a good thing?" Perkins asked at the time.

Under the latest proposal, the state Department of Taxation would set up a system to issue licenses for marijuana farms and for certain retailers to sell pot.

Levine's group is an offshoot of the Marijuana Policy Project based in Washington, D.C., which funded the drive to place the initiative on next year's ballot in Nevada.



Source: Long Beach Press-Telegram (CA)
Copyright: 2005 Los Angeles Newspaper Group
Contact: speakout@presstelegram.com
Website: https://www.ptconnect.com/
 
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