Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

California voters will face crowded November ballot

Up to 18 ballot questions possible

- By MICHAEL R. BLOOD

LOS ANGELES — California is again testing how much democracy is too much, with voters facing up to 18 ballot questions in November that could end the death penalty, cut into the cost of prescripti­on drugs and free marijuana smokers to legally light up in the nation’s most populous state.

The cascade of proposals is certain to create confusion at the ballot box, with fresh criticism that the state’s system of direct democracy has run amok. Low voter turnout in 2014 meant campaigns needed relatively few signatures to qualify for the ballot.

Collective­ly, the proposals would cut into a broad swath of life in California, involving issues from classrooms to prisons, the porn industry to cigarette taxes.

Voters will ponder whether gun owners should be subject to background checks to buy bullets, if a state ban on single-use plastic bags at grocery stores is needed or whether adult film actors should wear condoms during shoots.

There are proposals to take on $9 billion in public debt to build schools, to repeal an “English-only” rule in classroom instructio­n approved by voters nearly two decades ago, and to require voters to sign off on huge constructi­on projects financed by public debt, which could threaten the state’s unpopular high-speed rail project.

Questions on either repealing or speeding up the death penalty and legalizing recreation­al pot use could drive voters to the polls. But dense ballots can turn off others, warned Kim Alexander of the nonpartisa­n California Voter Foundation, which seeks to improve the way elections are conducted.

The logjam this year can be partially attributed to the Legislatur­e, which pushed all the ballot questions to November.

“People don’t like to do things they feel they are not good at, and it can be challengin­g for California voters to feel confident about their choices,” Alexander said.

It will be a tough sell to get voters to read the fine print in the 15-page proposal to overturn a 2014 law to ban single-use plastic bags at supermarke­ts.

Then there is the Children’s Education and Health Care Protection Act, one of several proposals yet to be cleared for the ballot. In effect, the measure raises taxes by extending a post-recession, personal income tax increase for a dozen years that was sold to voters by Gov. Jerry Brown and other supporters as “temporary.”

Brown qualified his own proposal to allow earlier parole in certain cases for nonviolent felons and let judges decide which juvenile offenders are tried as adults, part of his plan to cut the prison population.

As of Thursday, 15 questions had qualified for the November ballot, either through petition drives or by approval by the Legislatur­e.

With the tax-increase extension, two other proposals were pending:

Raise California’s cigarette tax by $2 a pack to $2.87, making it ninth-highest in the nation.

Allow the state to sell $3 billion in bonds for maintenanc­e at state and local parks, a measure being contemplat­ed by the state Legislatur­e.

 ?? HAVEN DALEY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Customers buy products in April at the Harvest Medical Marijuana Dispensary in San Francisco. Voters in November will weigh in on legalizing recreation­al pot use.
HAVEN DALEY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Customers buy products in April at the Harvest Medical Marijuana Dispensary in San Francisco. Voters in November will weigh in on legalizing recreation­al pot use.

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