Pot Coming Back To The Florida Ballot?

January 11, 2015

Proponents of a medical-marijuana ballot initiative that fell short of passing in November are making a second attempt to legalize weed in Florida.

Orlando trial lawyer John Morgan, who pumped at least $2 million of his own money into the effort last year, said he filed proposed language Thursday with the Department of State for a 2016 constitutional amendment.

“We lost the battle. We plan to win the war,” Morgan said.

The measure clarifies some of the issues opponents, including Florida sheriffs, used to dissuade voters from approving the measure in November, according to Jon Mills, a constitutional law professor and former House speaker who drafted the proposal.

“There is nothing that’s different in the intent and the actual impact,” Mills told The News Service of Florida on Thursday.

Mills said he included in the revised proposal some of the statements the Florida Supreme Court made about last year’s initiative when justices ruled that the proposal met the requirements to go on the November ballot.

“What this will do is to clarify things that will make it really impossible to misinterpret,” he said.

The revamped measure clarifies that doctors cannot order medical marijuana for children without their parents’ approval, Mills said. Mills and other supporters have insisted all along that, as with other medical conditions, minors could not get medical pot without their parents’ or guardians’ permission. But the sheriffs railed about the issue last year, raising the specter of “a joint in every backpack” in discussions about the proposal.

The proposal also clears up ambiguity about what diseases would make patients eligible for medical-marijuana treatment, another major point of contention for the law-enforcement opponents of last year’s measure.

The revised measure defines “Debilitating Medical Condition” as cancer, epilepsy, glaucoma, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Crohn’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, or “other debilitating medical conditions of the same kind or class as or comparable to those enumerated.”

The old proposal would have allowed physicians to order the pot for “other conditions” in which a physician believed the use of medical marijuana would outweigh the potential risks for a patient. Opponents argued that “other conditions” would lead to a California-like parade of horribles in which patients could get pot for something as minor as a hangnail.

“The court said that it has to be the same type of disease, in other words, it can’t be a nosebleed. That was what was always intended, so that is reemphasized,” Mills said.

The language about a physician determining that the benefits of the treatment outweigh the risks is the same in both proposals, Mills pointed out.

People United for Medical Marijuana campaign manager Ben Pollara and other supporters hope the Legislature will broaden a law approved last year that authorized non-euphoric strains of pot for patients suffering from seizures or cancer.

Pollara said he hopes to have 100,000 signatures — enough to prompt a Supreme Court review of the new ballot language — in hand by the time the Legislature convenes in March.

“I’m cautiously optimistic that there’s the potential to pass a much more comprehensive medical-marijuana law” than the measure approved by the Legislature last year, Pollara said. “If we can do something like that, then we don’t need to go back on the ballot.”

But, he admitted, “I’ve gotten a very bipolar read” on what the Republican-dominated Legislature may do.

Proponents of the measure now have to work on gathering nearly 700,000 signatures to get the initiative onto the 2016 ballot. Morgan’s pollsters predict that between 60 and 62 percent of voters would support the measure if placed on the ballot during a presidential election. Reaching that threshold might be easier in 2016 because more voters, especially Democrats who may be friendlier toward legalizing marijuana, show up for presidential elections. The 2014 proposal fell just two percentage points shy of the 60 percent mark.

Getting the proposal on the 2016 ballot will cost considerably less than the $4.5 million it cost to put the issue before voters last year, Pollara said. What remains unknown is how much the opposition, which spent $7 million to defeat the measure last year, will drop to kill it this time around.

“We learned a lot last time. I hope to take those lessons and help me win in 2016,” Morgan said.

by Dara Kam and Brandon Larrabbee, The News Service of Florida

Comments

15 Responses to “Pot Coming Back To The Florida Ballot?”

  1. Betty on January 14th, 2015 8:57 am

    I am all for pot use for cancer and painful agonizing diseases but a hang nail is not a reason to get pot nor is stress or a head ache..Be real and sensible…

  2. chris in Molino on January 13th, 2015 8:47 pm

    It’s a little insane to think how brainwashed people can become. Read a little history of the AMA. When a big news story comes out regarding anything political, look up news from major cities. Anchors come on t.v. saying the exact same lines. Thats because the story comes right outta the White House (literally) .
    You grow up thinking somethings bad cause thats what “they” told you, it’s hard to accept anything else. I’d prefer marajuana stay illegal just because it sends the wrong message to kids. Either way i’m gonna smoke regardless of legality. I live life according to my own sense of right and wrong. Just like i was against gay marriage for religious reasons, i smoke for the same. Preachers tend to stay away from the truths in Genesis AND Revelations. Gen 1:29 “EVERY” green herb that beareth seed for me to consume. I can hear em now : Oh he didnt mean that. No, it says EVERY. You dont have to boil, cook, mix, or add anything to it so……

  3. Tammy on January 13th, 2015 5:37 am

    the majority already voted for it. this is a good idea.

  4. Rufus Lowgun on January 12th, 2015 12:49 pm

    “Great…more drugs on the streets and more shoot outs for drug deals going bad.
    GREAT IDEA PENSACOLA !!”

    Except if it was legal, there wouldn’t be any drug deals going bad, so no shootouts.

  5. awesome !!! on January 12th, 2015 9:58 am

    This is awesome if you think negative about this then you clearly don’t know your facts and only what you wanna believe !! It helps people with 0 side effects and not to mention man made medicine is worse ! This was made by God so I think its awesome cause now the people that need it can get it !!I know it will win I will be praying!!

  6. southerner on January 12th, 2015 9:20 am

    It should NOT be put in the Florida Constitution! Pass a law about it. The Constitution should not be cluttered.

  7. Vicky on January 12th, 2015 6:52 am

    We have already voted against this a couple of times, let it go people! Wait I forgot our votes don’t really matter. Why bother to put it on the ballot? Just take it to a judge who agrees with you and he’ll judge it unconstitutional and make it a law bypassing the voters. Gay marriage was forced on us by a judge in this manner, so why not just go find you a judge and get it passed. We are learning that our votes don’t count in Florida anymore!
    I don’t think they should make Marijuana legal to be administered in the home. If you must use it for medical purposes then it should be done under medical supervision, not for parents to administer.

  8. John on January 12th, 2015 6:46 am

    The American Medical Association (AMA), has consistantly voiced opposition to medical marijuana and written many articles about, so tell me if a group of medicals doctors are against it, when they can profit from it, then WHO do you think will benefit from it, I will not be poor little children with epilepsy.

  9. David on January 11th, 2015 9:52 pm

    Great…more drugs on the streets and more shoot outs for drug deals going bad.
    GREAT IDEA PENSACOLA !!

  10. melodies4us on January 11th, 2015 2:56 pm

    It’s not like it’s going anywhere.

  11. aburn fan on January 11th, 2015 1:44 pm

    I was very I’ll in the 80’s I smoked weed it was the only thing that helped me with no side effects. When I got better and stablized I didn’t use it ever again.

  12. molinoman on January 11th, 2015 8:17 am

    Yes it will happen, it is just taking time. It is being made legal in some form across the U.S. no reason to think Florida will not eventually be the same. That 2% will be easy to make up during a primary election. Several large CEO’s will be backing it this time, so maybe that will trump the CEO in Vegas that funded the anti-marijuana propaganda campaign to shut it down last election (all of which were lies and people still bought into it, heh).

  13. john on January 11th, 2015 7:14 am

    I voted against it before, an I’ll vote the same way again.

  14. Sam on January 11th, 2015 7:13 am

    If prescribed by a doctor, it would seem to be o k. I would rather it be in a pill form so as to make a defined dosage.

  15. precious on January 11th, 2015 1:15 am

    I think it would be great if it was passed because it will help a lot of people including my son that has epilepsy the medicine they have to take is very harmful to there liver and other organs plus all the side effects.