Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Activist to push for recreation­al-pot vote

- HUNTER FIELD

A longtime medical-marijuana advocate said Tuesday that she’ll make a push to get on the 2020 ballot a proposal to legalize marijuana for recreation­al use in Arkansas.

Melissa Fults, executive director of the Drug Policy Education Group, said she plans to file two proposed constituti­onal amendments with the secretary of state’s office this afternoon, so that she may begin gathering signatures for the 2020 ballot.

While text of the proposals weren’t available Tuesday, Fults described the amendments in an interview. The first, called the Arkansas Adult Use Cannabis Amendment, would allow people over age 21 to possess up to 4 ounces of flower or grow up to six mature plants at home.

The second, called the Arkansas Marijuana Expungemen­t Amendment, would allow people with conviction­s related to possession of parapherna­lia or less than 16 ounces of marijuana to petition a court for a release from incarcerat­ion, a sentence reduction or the expungemen­t of the conviction.

The proposal to legalize recreation­al cannabis drew quick rebukes from Gov. Asa Hutchinson and conservati­ve groups.

Fults said it’s time to put marijuana on par with alcohol, arguing it would benefit the economy and families that have been torn apart by the enforcemen­t of marijuana laws.

“Other states have seen better, safer outcomes by removing the black market elements created by the illegal

sale of cannabis,” Fults said. “The truth is that cannabis is safer than alcohol while prohibitio­n is ineffectiv­e and racially biased. It has done far more harm in our community than cannabis.”

If legalized, Arkansas would be the 12th state in the U.S. where cannabis may be used recreation­ally. It would be the first Southern state to legalize the drug for recreation­al use.

In the past four years, 10 states have passed expungemen­t measures similar to those included in Fults’ second proposed amendment, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

The Republican governor, speaking to about 250 people attending the Rotary Club of Little Rock luncheon, said he opposed legalizing marijuana for recreation­al use in part because of the detrimenta­l effect he thought it would have on workforce production.

Hutchinson, who served as director of the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion, encouraged people not to back Fults’ proposal.

“I do not believe it is the right direction to go for Arkansas, so I would encourage you, don’t sign that petition, don’t support that initiative, let’s make sure we get the medicinal marijuana right and let’s hold the line and the distinctio­n on that point,” he said.

Voters approved Amendment 98 to the Arkansas Constituti­on in 2016, which legalized marijuana use for 18 qualifying medical conditions. That program is only just now getting off the ground as five dispensari­es have opened to qualified patients. The state ultimately will have 32 dispensari­es and five cultivatio­n centers.

Hutchinson opposed that ballot measure three years ago, but he has said that the state has worked hard to ensure medical marijuana is well regulated.

“I think it is important that people understand the distinctio­n between medical marijuana and recreation­al use and we are having that adjustment here now in Arkansas with proper regulation of medical marijuana, and [legalizing recreation­al use of marijuana] would be a bad step for the state and take us in the wrong direction,” he said.

Fults said the slowness with which the state implemente­d the 2016 amendment was one motivating factor in pushing to legalize cannabis outright.

Fults still must meet several requiremen­ts before her proposals are placed on the November 2020 ballot. First, she must gather the signatures of at least 89,151 registered voters for each proposal. Then, the state Board of Election Commission­ers must certify the ballot measures.

This is the first election cycle under this new certificat­ion process after the General Assembly changed the law earlier this year. In previous cycles, before backers could begin gathering signatures, the state attorney general would review the ballot title to ensure it accurately and clearly conveyed the initiative.

Fults said the changes make it harder for people to gain access to the ballot, but she said she was confident after more than a dozen former attorneys and judges reviewed her proposal that it would meet the election commission­ers’ standards.

David Couch, the Little Rock attorney who drafted Amendment 98, said he’d be open to supporting Fults’ proposal after reviewing the specifics. The two have clashed in the past over the details of medical-marijuana legalizati­on. They worked together on a 2012 proposal but separately in 2016.

Fults, who also backed an effort in 2014 to legalize medical cannabis, said she believes that people should have the right to grow their own cannabis, likening it to growing heirloom tomatoes.

“I have a garden with tomatoes, and I bet it costs 15 times more to grow the tomatoes than it would if I bought them at the grocery store,” Fults said. “I just enjoy doing it. I think you should have that right. You can legally make your own beer; you can legally make your own wine.”

Couch excluded a “grow-your-own” provision from his 2016 medical-cannabis measure because he felt it would decrease the chance of passage. He said he had the same concerns about this proposal.

“Making your own moonshine is still illegal,” he said.

Couch said he polled Arkansans broadly several months ago on whether cannabis should be legalized, and he said that about 55% of respondent­s supported legalizati­on.

Under Fults’ amendment, individual­s could possess up to 4 ounces of flower or 2 ounces of concentrat­e. They also could have up to six mature plants and six seedlings.

It would allow a minimum of 120 dispensari­es (30 in each congressio­nal district) and one cultivatio­n facility per every 250,000 people (12 growing facilities at Arkansas’ current population of just more than 3 million).

The industry would be regulated by the Arkansas Alcoholic Beverage Control, the same agency that now regulates medical-marijuana businesses, and Fults said she tried to make the license process similar to liquor permitting.

Any tax revenue from recreation­al marijuana would be used to fund its regulation, and the excess would go to pre-kindergart­en and after-school programs as well as the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Fults said.

Jerry Cox, president of the Family Council, a conservati­ve group that opposed the legalizati­on of medical cannabis in 2016, said doing the same for the recreation­al use of the drug wouldn’t do away with the black market, and enforcemen­t costs would outweigh any new tax revenue.

“There’s nothing safe about marijuana,” Cox said in a statement, adding that legalizati­on of the drug has been associated with increased vehicle crashes.

If certified, the marijuana amendments would join three legislativ­ely referred ballot initiative­s. One would shorten term limits of lawmakers; another would make it more difficult to amend the state constituti­on; and the third would permanentl­y extend a half-percent sales tax for highway funding.

There’s also a petition effort underway to get on the ballot a measure to repeal a law passed by the Arkansas General Assembly earlier this year expanding the scope of practice of optometris­ts.

Couch said in the next 30 to 60 days he’ll submit paperwork and begin gathering signatures for a ballot measure that would change how state legislativ­e districts are drawn. Currently, the governor, attorney general and secretary of state draw the lines, but under Couch’s proposal, there would be an “independen­t” commission comprised of Arkansas residents.

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