California
tech billionaire's marijuana legalization measure wins
key support
Send a link to a friend
[December 10, 2015]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - Efforts to
legalize marijuana in California got a boost this week after competing
ballot measures joined forces behind the stronger of the two, backed by
billionaire Sean Parker, a former president of Facebook Inc.
|
The initiative has the support of Democratic Lieutenant Governor
Gavin Newsom and the Coalition for Cannabis Policy Reform. Coalition
board member Antonio Gonzalez, who is also president of the Latino
Voters League, said the coalition withdrew its rival initiative
after Parker's measure was modified to protect children, workers and
small businesses.
The move brings to a close weeks of behind-the-scenes negotiations
aimed at closing the gaps between the initiatives, amid concerns
that neither would succeed if both wound up on the ballot for 2016.
Marijuana use is illegal under federal law in the United States but
23 states allow the use of pot for medical purposes. Recently,
Colorado, Washington and Oregon have approved recreational use and
Alaska is set to allow it next year.
Voters in Massachusetts, Michigan, Nevada and Arizona could face
ballot initiatives next year intended to legalize marijuana.
In California, amendments filed this week to Parker's proposal would
allow local governments a greater say in where marijuana can be
sold, toughen protections for children, including a ban on marketing
to minors and explicit warning labels on marijuana products, and
require safety standards and enforcement of labor laws for people
who work in the industry.
The measure would tax marijuana sales and cultivation, raising
hundreds of millions of dollars for the state, proponents say.
California has the largest marketplace for medical marijuana sales
in the United States, according to the research group IBIS World.
Nationwide, medical and recreational marijuana is expected to bring
in $3.6 billion in revenue in 2015, growing to $13.4 billion over
the next five years, the company says.
A marijuana legalization initiative failed in California in 2010,
but public opinion is shifting.
[to top of second column] |
Parker's measure would legalize recreational marijuana use for
adults over 21 and set up a framework for regulating and taxing
sales.
Parker's deep pockets suggest that his initiative will be
well-funded, although campaign finance records do not show any
contributions as of Wednesday.
In 2010 supporters invested $3.5 million in Proposition 19,
outspending opponents nearly 8-1. But the measure failed amid
concerns that it did not protect children or guard against driving
under the influence.
California is home to ever-more expensive initiative campaigns. In
2012, supporters and opponents of Democratic Governor Jerry Brown's
successful bid to temporarily raise taxes spent about $85 million,
records show.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Sara Catania and Lisa
Shumaker)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|