Reuters
Rolling a marijuana joint (AFP Photo/Juan Mabromata)
Californians are set to decide whether to make recreational marijuana
use legal, as other Western states have done, after the California
Secretary of State’s office said on Tuesday the issue could be put to
voters in the November ballot.
The proposed so-called “Adult Use of Marijuana Act,” which is
supported by Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom among others, would allow
people aged 21 and older to possess as much as an ounce of marijuana for
private recreational use and permit personal cultivation of as many as
six marijuana plants.
“Today marks a fresh start for California, as we prepare to replace
the costly, harmful and ineffective system of prohibition with a safe,
legal and responsible adult-use marijuana system that gets it right and
completely pays for itself,” initiative spokesman Jason Kinney said in a
statement.
The measure would also establish a system to license, regulate and
tax sales of marijuana, while allowing city governments to exercise
local control over or disallow commercial distribution within their
borders.
The initiative required just over 402,000 valid signatures to qualify
for the ballot and exceeded that number on Tuesday, the Secretary of
State’s office said. Secretary Alex Padilla is slated to certify the
initiative on June 30.
Opinion polls show attitudes have shifted more in favor of
liberalized marijuana laws since California voters defeated a
recreational cannabis initiative in 2010.
California led the way in legalizing marijuana for medical purposes
in 1996, with 22 other states and the District of Columbia following
suit, although cannabis remains classified as an illegal narcotic under
U.S. law.
Voters in four states – Colorado, Washington, Oregon and Alaska –
plus the District of Columbia, have gone a step further since 2012 in
permitting recreational use for adults. Voters in several more states
will consider similar legislation in November as well.
Opponents of liberalized marijuana laws have argued that such
measures carry public safety risks and would make pot more accessible to
youngsters.
A new survey out last week showed however that marijuana consumption
by Colorado high school students has dipped slightly since the state
first permitted recreational cannabis use by adults.
(Reporting by Curtis Skinner in San Francisco; Editing by Brendan O’Brien and Simon Cameron-Moore)
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