The Commercial Appeal

Quest for Miss. pot petition gets help

- By Ron Maxey maxey@desotoappe­al.com 901-333-2019

A Florida advocate of legalizing marijuana has entered t he Mississipp­i push for legalizati­on by offering to pay volunteers to collect petition signatures needed to get the measure on the 2016 general election ballot.

Jeremy Bufford, president of Medical Marijuana United, says he will pay $1 per certified signature collected, or $2 per certified signature in some areas where organizers are finding the challenge of collecting signatures particular­ly difficult.

Rules posted on a website establishe­d to promote the Mississipp­i legalizati­on initiative, mississipp­icannabisc­ollective.com, state that teams may collect signatures and the team collecting the most signatures will be paid at

least $30,000. Signatures must be certified as those of registered voters by the local circuit clerk’s office, and at least 100 certified signatures must be collected to be eligible for payment.

“I was desperate for t his ,” Kelly Jacobs of DeSoto County, who initiated the legalizati­on push known as Ballot Initiative 48, said of Bufford’s i nvolvement. “So many people are afraid to sign because t hey’re suspicious, and this will provide a real incentive for those collecting signatures to work hard to gather them.”

Four states and the District of Columbia have l ega l i zed recreat iona l marijuana use, and an additional eight states allow medical marijuana. Jacobs and other supporters of the Mississipp­i initiative want to legalize it for adults, regulating it the same as alcohol and imposing a 7 percent sales tax. The proposal also would legalize growing industrial hemp, allowing farmers to grow it under the purview of state Department of Agricultur­e testing for THC levels. Industrial hemp would not be subject to sales tax.

Jacobs’ group, Mississipp­i for Cannabis, filed a petition with the Secretary of State’s office in September to get the issue on the 2016 general election ballot, and the office i n December approved the measure for placement on the ballot as Initiative 48, subject to collecting the required 107, 216 petition signatures, or at least 21,4 43 from each of the state’s five congressio­nal districts that existed before redistrict­ing reduced the number of districts to the current four.

Since that time, volunteers have been collecting signatures, but Jacobs hopes the involvemen­t by Bufford will jump-start the collection process.

Bufford has also been active as a volunteer in a similar effort to legalize recreation­al marijuana in Florida, and he is active in other states’ efforts as well. But Bufford said Wednesday that Mississipp­i is the only state where he is offering payment to collect signatures.

“We feel comfortabl­e that we can get this done, and we hope to wrap up the effort by August,” said Bufford, who founded Medica l Marijua na in Tampa to teach classes about marijuana, including the history and legal perspectiv­e.

The office of Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann, when contacted about the pay-for-signatures push, offered without i nterpretat­ion language from the Mississipp­i Code that addresses the issue. The language cited states that it is “unlawful for a person to give or offer any considerat­ion to an elector to induce the elector to sign or not sign a petition for a measure.”

Bufford said his interpreta­tion of t he statute is that people cannot be compensate­d to sign the petition but that those collecting the signatures can be compensate­d for their efforts.

Another section of the statute, which seems to support Bufford’s contention that petition collectors can be paid, says those being compensate­d cannot have their pay based on the number of signatures collected. Bufford said that provision, however, has previously been declared unconstitu­tional.

The higher pay rate of $2 per signature is being offered in areas of the Mississipp­i Delta, where Jacobs said people have been particular­ly reluctant to sign.

“There are many people who want to sign,” Jacobs said, “but there’s a fear that they will be arrested just for signing the petition. It’s been a real challenge educating people on what this all means.”

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