Medical Marijuana Fight Returns to Airwaves, Computers

Christine Green

New Member
Tallahassee – The medical marijuana amendment is back, and the fight over the issue is poised to return to the airwaves and screens of all sizes throughout Florida.

Drug Free Florida, the group that successfully fended off a similar amendment in 2014, released its first video this week attacking the new measure that will go before voters on the November ballot. The three-minute video is running online only, but it signals the start of a campaign likely to inundate the state with ads.

The video compares the ballot measure with California's experience, which it portrays as having a glut of pot shops and users who have at best a weak link to any medical malady.

"It really isn't something that looks like a pharmacy; it's really something recreational, and it's not really going to people in need," said Christina Johnson, spokeswoman for No on 2, Drug Free Florida's campaign.

Drug Free Florida's political committee raised $6.4 million to defeat the similar initiative in 2014, with the vast majority of that coming from casino magnate Sheldon Adelson and the family trust of Carol Jenkins Barnett, CEO of Publix.

But it has raised little since, according to the latest state campaign finance report. Johnson said that will change soon, though.

"Right now we're in the initial stages of putting things together, and I know the finance committee is going to go out there raising money and I think that'll dictate what our general election strategy will be," Johnson said.

By contrast, the political committee for United for Care, the group supporting the amendment, has raised and spent $3.6 million since the 2014 election, although most of that money went to paid petition gatherers to get the measure on the ballot again.

Orlando trial lawyer John Morgan, a Democratic fundraiser, is backing the push again this time. His firm has contributed $2.7 million since June 2015 to the campaign.

The 2014 measure received 58 percent of the vote, but constitutional amendments need 60 percent to pass in Florida.

The 2016 amendment would allow doctors to prescribe marijuana to patients with a "debilitating" disease or condition, such as cancer, epilepsy, glaucoma, HIV/AIDS, post-traumatic stress disorder, ALS, Crohn's disease, Parkinson's disease and multiple sclerosis.

The previous ballot measure defined eligible diseases more loosely. Supporters say the new amendment tightens up the concerns over loopholes that opponents say would allow for de facto legalization.

In addition to the stricter definition, it mandates more state oversight, including requiring parents to give written consent to the state to allow their children to be prescribed marijuana.

"The opposition says 'medical marijuana is for anything, it's for a hangnail.' Well, no it's only for debilitating medical conditions," said United for Care director Ben Pollara.

No matter the outcome this time, though, controversy over the issue will linger. Marijuana is still classified by the federal government as a Schedule I drug, with its sale and use banned.

Public health departments and the criminal justice system will have to deal with a shift in attitudes toward the drug.

The Florida Department of Health already is struggling with licensing nurseries to grow and sell non-euphoric strands of marijuana for epileptic patients, two years after the Legislature passed a law allowing them to do so.

Law enforcement officials will have to grapple with differing punishments for marijuana possession as different cities take up softer penalties.

Daytona Beach became the latest city to do so on Thursday, passing an ordinance allowing officers to hand out tickets to those caught with less than 20 grams of marijuana. Orlando passed a similar measure last week, but many nearby municipalities have not.


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