Posted on 12/18/2013 8:53:29 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic
MADISON -Marijuana may achieve high margins at the ballot box next April in Dane County. The second largest county in Wisconsin and the seat of state government may not express their support for legalized recreational pot use. Instead it may receive a public vote.
Dane County Supervisors Leland Pan and Kyle Richmond introduced the advisory referendum at a County Board Meeting on December 6th.
The referendum would specifically ask whether county residents would support the Wisconsin Legislature legalizing marijuana use.
Pan said I believe most Dane County residents and most Wisconsinites understand that criminalizing marijuana is a massive waste of law enforcement, resources, and infringement on personal liberty. We are giving them a chance to say so with this referendum, loud and clear.
The measure has been endorsed by Nate Petreman, president of the Madison chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.
In a press release Petreman said put the question before the people. I urge our representatives in state government to listen to what the people say.
Wisconsin Counties Association Government Affairs Director Kyle Christianson said it isnt uncommon for counties to pass resolutions that may be unique to their individual county or their constituents, and he additionally commented that Dane County is the only county in the state he knows of that is addressing marijuana through a ballot measure.
If a referendum to legalize marijuana passes the boards Executive Committee and the full county board, the measure would show up on the ballot for the spring general election held in Arpil 2014.
In 2010, the county approved legalizing medical marijuana by a margin of 75 percent. Just like the proposed referendum, the 2010 referendum was an advisory referendum as well.
Advisory referendums have no effect as law. They simply gauge public sentiment on policy issues.
Support for the referendum in Dane County comes after Illinois approved medicinal marijuana and Washington and Colorado legalized recreational marijuana use.
In a scathing editorial published in the Waterloo/Marshall Courier (a Dane County paper), the measure was described as a Christmas present to the countys liberal political base.
They went on to say the longer Dane County leaders continue to ignore the local economy without some sort of action and continue to focus attention on these do-nothing referenda the longer the countys economy will remain in a funk. Dane County Supervisors need to focus on legislation that will get people back to work not invest in do-nothing referenda that will send more people into local grocery and convenience stores to satisfy the munchies.
All marijuana use, possession and cultivation is illegal in the state of Wisconsin. Marijuana is regulated under Wisconsin Stat. § 961.14.
It is important to note that federal law including the Controlled Substances Act outlaws Marijuana. As such, some pro-canabis activists and organizations have expressed fear of federal law enforcement interfering with marijuana use in the states that legalize it or relax restrictions.
Dane County to vote on legalizing marijuana. May I quote Hillary: “What difference does it make?”
FReep Mail me if you want on, or off, this Wisconsin interest ping list.
OK, go ahead. Legalize marijuana, then tax the hell out of it, just like alcohol and tobacco.
Then use the revenue generated to SPECIFICALLY apply it to the damage and human wreckage left by marijuana use.
That ought to include at least a quarter of the graduates of the liberal arts degree programs issued by the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Those who graduated in the more science-oriented programs do not have such a broad problem with hallucinogenic substances.
That way, the habitual users of marijuana are simply prepaying on their own rehabilitation and treatment problems in future years.
Anyone that wants to do it is already doing it. So I don’t think there is going to be a spike in pot use.
I can’t beleive it took all the OLD hippies that have lived here since the 60’s this LONG to accomplish this, LOL!
Regardless what states do re recreational drugs, when a person goes to buy a firearm, he still has to answer “yes” to the question, “Do you use illegal drugs?”
No, but we can start taxing it. :-)
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