Pro-pot measure returns to ballot
January 8th, 2008
A landmark 2000 Mendocino County marijuana measure will be back before voters in the June primary, a move taken Tuesday by the Board of Supervisors after a contentious three-hour public hearing.
“It’s a big step toward regaining control of our county,” said Ross
Liberty of Ukiah, one of the organizers of a drive to repeal Measure G.
County
supervisors decided 4-1 to put the fate of Measure G up for voter
review over the objections of longtime local advocates of
decriminalization of pot for personal and medical uses.
Measure
G garnered national attention seven years ago by becoming the first
measure in the United States to allow an individual to grow up to 25
plants for personal use without fear of prosecution. It paved the way
for locally liberal law enforcement policies surrounding medical
marijuana use.
But the measure since has been blamed for a surge
in local pot production under the guise of medical marijuana use and a
host of crime-related problems that have taxed law enforcement agencies.
The
board’s vote Tuesday allowed proponents of Measure G’s repeal to avoid
a lengthy and potentially costly signature-gathering process to qualify
the measure for the ballot. Supporters presented the board with
petitions bearing the names of 942 registered voters in support of a
second look at Measure G.
Besides deciding to put Measure G on
the ballot, the board in a separate action also imposed a 25-plant
limit per parcel of property on licensed medical marijuana providers.
The parcel limit is seen as a way to clamp down on a proliferation of
large marijuana plantations, some totaling 10,000 plants or more.


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