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California's Proposition 19 will supersede or amend its medical marijuana laws

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Lazyman

Overkill is under-rated.
Veteran
Though we all assumed it would not do so, it appears that either by omission or by setting new precedents, Prop 19 WOULD impact medical users in the state.

From http://www.examiner.com/x-14883-San...supersede-or-amend-its-medical-marijuana-laws

Proponents of California's Regulate Control and Tax Cannabis 2010 Initiative (Prop. 19) claim it will have no effect on California's medical marijuana laws, that it "explicitly upholds the rights of medical marijuana patients".
The language of the initiative says otherwise.
Yesterday, Russ Belville stated in a comment to his blog in The Huffington Post that "Prop 19 does nothing to change Prop 215 or your access to your current dispensary." Belville is NORML's Outreach Coordinator and Host of NORML Show Live.
Meanwhile, in an article that is causing quite a stir among proponents of ending marijuana prohibition, Dragonfly De La Luz lists 18 reasons "Pro-Pot Activists" oppose Prop. 19.
Regarding whether or not Prop. 19 will amend or supersede California's medical marijuana laws she had this to say:
While amendments were made ostensibly to prevent the initiative from affecting current medical marijuana law, a careful reading of the initiative reveals that this is not, in fact, the case. Certain medical marijuana laws are exempt from the prohibitions the initiative would enact, while others are glaringly absent.
Cultivation is one such law that is noticeably non-exempt.[17] In spite of the fact that the tax cannabis Web site says otherwise, the only medical marijuana exemptions that the Regulate, Control and Tax Cannabis Initiative actually makes are with regard to possession, consumption and purchase limits, which only ensure that patients would still be allowed to buy medicine at dispensaries. The word “cultivate” is conspicuously absent. Whereas today a person with a doctor’s recommendation has the right to grow up to an unlimited number of plants, the initiative would drastically reduce that number to whatever can fit in a 5’x5’ footprint (around 3-6 plants—per property, not per person). This will force many patients to resort to buying instead of growing their own medicine, because of the inconvenience caused by producing multiple grows a year rather than growing a year’s supply of medicine at one time, as many patients currently do outdoors. And growing indoors—which typically requires special grow lights, an increase in hydro use, and a lot of time and attention—is a comparatively expensive endeavor.
The initiative would further impact medical marijuana patients by banning medicating in the privacy of their own homes if there are minors present, as well as in public (currently perfectly legal[18])—an invaluable liberty to those with painful diseases who would otherwise have to suffer until they got home to relieve their pain.
Finally, the medical marijuana laws that are exempted from this initiative apparently only apply to cities. For medical marijuana patients who live in an area that has county or local government jurisdiction, according to a strict reading of the initiative, medical marijuana laws are not exempt.[19]
The amendments she refers to were made after Comparing California cannabis/marijuana legalization initiatives was published 31 Jul 09 in Examiner.com. This article noted that the proponents of Proposition 19 had manged to get through 14 drafts without exempting medical marijuana patients from any of its provisions: not the unlimited taxes & licensing fees, not the possession & cultivation limits, not the prohibition on smoking in public or in sight of anyone under 18.
The amendments consisted of adding the phrase "except as permitted under Health and Safety Sections 11362.5 and 11362.7 through 11362.9" to the end of Items 7 & 8 under Purposes.
The initiative mentions medical marijuana three times and omits mentioning it once.
The Mentions
The three mentions are Items 6, 7, and 8 in Section 2, B. Purposes.
6. Provide easier, safer access for patients who need cannabis for medical purposes.
The courts will determine that this means Prop. 19 is intended to amend and supersede California's medical marijuana laws; Proposition 215 (H&S 11362.5) and SB 420 (H&S 11362.7-H&S 11362.9).
7. Ensure that if a city decides not to tax and regulate the sale of cannabis, that buying and selling cannabis within that city’s limits remain illegal, but that the city’s citizens still have the right to possess and consume small amounts, except as permitted under Health and Safety Sections 11362.5 and 11362.7 through 11362.9.

8. Ensure that if a city decides it does want to tax and regulate the buying and selling of cannabis (to and from adults only), that a strictly controlled legal system is implemented to oversee and regulate cultivation, distribution, and sales, and that the city will have control over how and how much cannabis can be bought and sold, except as permitted under Health and Safety Sections 11362.5 and 11362.7 through 11362.9.
The first thing to note about these sections is that they are specific to cities. Nowhere does the word "county" appear.
In Item 7, "city" is specified 3 times, every way they know how: "if a city", "that city's limits", "the city's citizens". The rule of thumb is if you say something three times you mean exactly what you said.
This item exempts medical marijuana patients only in cities, and only with regard to how much they may possess and consume. It makes it legal to ban medical marijuana dispensaries, collectives, and delivery services. Unless the city enacts a sin tax, any buying and selling will be illegal.
The Omission
Section C, Intents, has two items.
Item 1 is a list of the laws Prop. 19 is "intended to limit the application and enforcement of". The inclusion of the phrase "including but not limited to the following, whether now existing or adopted in the future" opens the door for the argument to be made that Prop. 19 may (and most likely will) be interpreted to "limit" the "application and enforcement" of the now existing medical marijuana laws.
This interpretation is reinforced by Item 2 under this section, a list of state laws Prop. 19 "is not intended to affect the application or enforcement of".
Note that Item 2 is not open-ended. There is no "including but not limited to" modifier for this Item.
Conspicuously absent from either list are California's medical marijuana laws: Health & Safety Code Sections 11362.5 and 11362.7-11362.9.
These mentions and omissions occur in the 'preamble' of the initiative, titled Findings, Intent and Purposes. Concerns have been expressed regarding how legally binding these sections are and that nowhere in the sections to be added to California's legal code is there any mention of medical marijuana or any exemption for medical marijuana patients and providers.
Exploiting pain and suffering

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Nowhere does the initiative exempt medical marijuana cultivators or distributors from the tax.
Proponents of Prop. 19 often argue that everything is taxed. This is not true. Illinois is the only state that taxes prescription pharmaceuticals, and that tax is 1%.
Proponents of Prop. 19 claim they want to tax and regulate marijuana like alcohol. It costs $450 to license a pharmacy in California and between $340-$580 to license a retail alcohol establishment. Long Beach claims 85 medical marijuana dispensaries and charges $14,742 for a license. Oakland has a limit of 4 dispensaries and charges them $30,000 for a license.
Proponents of Prop. 19 argue that it is illegal to consume alcohol in sight of anyone under 21 or in public. California is littered with sidewalk cafes and pizza parlors that serve beer, wine, and mixed drinks in public and in the sight of children.
To date the cities of Oakland (the home or Proposition 19), Sacramento (The State Capital), Long Beach, and Berkeley have announced proposals to tax medical marijuana in order to keep their medical marijuana dispensaries from being shut down should Proposition 19 pass.
The most liberal of these is Berkeley, where medical marijuana patients will pay 7.5% less tax than recreational users, and it will only cost them 2.5% more than the 9.75% in sales tax they're already paying.
Sacramento is proposing a sin tax of between 5% and 10% for recreational users and 2% to 4% for the sick and dying. "We're trying to get ahead of the process," said councilmember Sandy Sheedy, who proposed the ordinance.
Medical marijuana patients use considerably more than recreational users. Irv Rosenfeld receives 11 ounces per month from the federal government. Maine recently determined that it's medical marijuana patients would use 5 ounces per month, on average. The tax on medicine, besides being ethically inconsistent, falls most heavily on the sickest, who tend to be the poorest.
At $400 per ounce, a medical marijuana patient who needs 3 ounces a month will pay $138.60 tax per month in Oakland.
Meanwhile, no city or county in California has reversed itself on a ban or moratorium on medical marijuana dispensaries since Oakland (home of Prop. 19) passed Measure F, the first medical marijuana tax.
Meanwhile, several cases are working through the courts challenging medical marijuana bans, moratoriums, and regulations which are de facto bans, as discriminatory and in violation of California's medical marijuana laws. Passage of Prop 19 will remove any legal basis for these cases.
Taking the 'medical' out of 'marijuana'
<EMBED style="VISIBILITY: visible" id=myytplayer type=application/x-shockwave-flash width=300 src=http://www.youtube.com/v/dLpHwDJDR-s&autoplay=&fs=1&showinfo=0&showsearch=0&rel=0&hl=en_US&fs=1&rel=0&border=1 wmode="opaque" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always"></EMBED> Dennis Peron on Tax & Regulate #1

Prop. 19 adds five sections to California's Health & Safety Code, §§ 11300-11304.
§11300 is titled Personal Regulation and Controls. Item a) begins with the phrase "Notwithstanding any other provision of law".
This section makes possession of more than an ounce or by anyone under 21 illegal. It also limits non-licensed cultivation to 25 square feet per residence or parcel, not per person.
If the authors of Prop. 19 wanted to protect medical marijuana patients, why did they say "notwithstanding any other provision of law"?
§11301 is titled Commercial Regulations and Controls. It begins with the phrase "Notwithstanding any other provision of state or local law". It prohibits sales to anyone under 21. Nowhere in this section is there any exemption for medical marijuana patients, cultivators, or distributors.
In addition to allowing cities and counties to ban commercial cultivation and sales (including medical marijuana collectives and dispensaries) it states the following:
(g) prohibit and punish through civil fines or other remedies the possession, sale, possession for sale, cultivation, processing, or transportation of cannabis that was not obtained lawfully from a person pursuant to this section or section 11300;
This means that the taxes and fees paid by the licensed commercial cultivators and distributors will be used to eliminate the competition. For example, Oakland (the home of Prop. 19) is in the process of licensing four cultivators to supply the approximately 6,000 pounds per year sold by the four licensed dispensaries. Bay Citizen put it this way:
Growing marijuana can be lucrative, but the city’s proposed new rules would eliminate small-timers. It would cost $5,000 just to apply for a cultivation permit, and a regulatory fee of $211,000 for the lucky winners. If one has the cash, it’s a small price to pay for the right to produce a crop with an estimated retail value of $7 million. The fee pays for regulating cultivation in Oakland, which will include enforcement against the guys with grow lights in their garages and backyard sheds.
The New York times reports that the leading contender for one of these cultivation permits is Jeff Wilcox, a member of the Proposition 19 steering committee. "Mr. Wilcox estimated that AgraMed would cost $20 million to develop."
Reasonable Accommodation
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Montel Williams lights up Maine medical marijuana conference

Current California medical marijuana law does not prohibit smoking in public. It is not currently illegal for medical marijuana patients to smoke in public or in sight of anyone under 18:
11362.79. Nothing in this article shall authorize a qualified patient or person with an identification card to engage in the smoking of medical marijuana under any of the following circumstances:
(a) In any place where smoking is prohibited by law.
(b) In or within 1,000 feet of the grounds of a school, recreation center, or
youth center, unless the medical use occurs within a residence.
(c) On a schoolbus.
(d) While in a motor vehicle that is being operated.
(e) While operating a boat.​
While debating Keith Kimber on Time4Hemp Chris Conrad stated Prop. 19 would have to win by a wider margin than Prop. 215 in order to supersede it. He reiterated this in an email that was passed around Facebook.
Even if it did conflict with or amend the medical marijuana laws, which it repeatedly does not do, Prop 19 would still have to pass by more than 56% to have any effect on Prop 215, which is highly unlikely.
Conrad is in error. The California Initiative Guide states the following:
If the provisions of two or more measures approved at the same election conflict, those of the measure receiving the highest affirmative vote shall prevail (Cal. Const., art. II, Section 10(b)).
This is not a case of two or more measures in the same election.

I for one am not voting for Prop 19, for a multitude of reasons, this one just being the latest and most egregious.
 

Lazyman

Overkill is under-rated.
Veteran
Just making sure this has been seen, I'm interested in hearing from folks who disagree and why!
 
i was always against taxcann 2010 and prop 19 for this very reason
it limits the personal grower a great deal which is something we are ALL against id assume

people seem to want to be bow down for anything which paves the way for legality
althought its tempting i say FUCK the government theyve been putting us in jail for what we have been doing for years and now they wanna take away peoples ability to culitvate for themselves ie making the consumer buy and pay taxes on their "meds" if its a medicine it should NOT be taxed do u pay taxes on your pharmies hell no so why should you with this if we are going to consider it medicine.

If we wanna make this a recreational thing and let everyone 18 and up have access to it then tax the piss out of it, otherwise fuck prop 19 and tax cann 2010, listen to perron he left Oaksterdam due to all of this bc he has a similar standpoint on this...
 

Hydrosun

I love my life
Veteran
Well I am happy to see this well written article. I have been urging no votes for months now.

This appears to be a very evil attack on growers and an unfair taxation on smokers.

It is scary to see the lies coming not only from the government, but from proponents who hope to profit from the members of this community.

:joint:
 

Lazyman

Overkill is under-rated.
Veteran
I've been trying to think of another counterculture product that would make a good analogy to government-approved weed:

Prop 20, legalized Anarchy!
Prop 21, state-funded raves!
Prop 22, state-mandated graffiti!

LOL

I dunno, I think our hippy forefathers would roll over in their graves at the thought of taxed and heavily-regulated cannabis. I'm so sick of big government and everything it represents, that giving this last bastion of counterculture over to them wholly just makes me nauseous.
 

maxmurder

Member
Veteran
wow what a load of shit! similar to what i've been sayin tho- when government (state and/or fed) can completely control every aspect they will allow it to be legal. i wonder how this will affect the billions being made from taking growers homes, cars, freezing bank accounts, the money all the jails and prisons,etc??
 

Hydrosun

I love my life
Veteran
I've been trying to think of another counterculture product that would make a good analogy to government-approved weed:

Prop 20, legalized Anarchy!
Prop 21, state-funded raves!
Prop 22, state-mandated graffiti!

LOL

I dunno, I think our hippy forefathers would roll over in their graves at the thought of taxed and heavily-regulated cannabis. I'm so sick of big government and everything it represents, that giving this last bastion of counterculture over to them wholly just makes me nauseous.

I agree whole heatedly with you but I think it is more than a counterculture issue it is a freedom issue. No one should be able to tell you what to do with you body or land so long as you aren't harming anyone else.

Growing and smoking your own is no different than brewing your own beer or gathering your own eggs from your chickens if you are lucky enough to have them.

The government has no rights over you on your own land!

:joint:
 

Shcrews

DO WHO YOU BE
Veteran
i think it's sad when people expect the best from a corrupt goverment... obviously the "legalized" ganja is gonna come with more limitations and regulations than exist now, it is just a ploy to make the rich richer, and the poor poorer.
 

dagnabit

Game Bred
Veteran
ive disputed this bullshit article in several threads but in short ill do it again here



I.tc2010 states it is "intended to limit enforcement of law" this sentence is very important and succinct.

II.the "rule of three" in the strictest legal sense is complete bullshit. the bill defines city/local government as follows "(vi) “local government” means a city, county, or city and county."

III.the "error of omission" this is just not how law works. tc2010 does not specifically mention murder but P.C.187 will be unaffected.

the truth is this.

after tc2010 if i want to grow pot for me in my home i can do so without having to ask the government or pay a fucking hack "doctor" to write me a recommendation for my hangnail.
 

JJScorpio

Thunderstruck
ICMag Donor
Veteran
When a new law is enacted to supercede an existing law, it will clearly say so. 19 clearly states that 215 is not affected by this legislation.

Does this wackjob that wrote this own a dispensory to? Like I keep saying. These people that make things up in order to get this bill to fail may be the same ones that will get 215 rewritten. If you think you're going to keep charging 400 bucks an ounce and the gov't isn't going to start getting their cut you're in for a big surprise...... Do you think the Gov't in Cali is offering legalization because they love Cannabis and the people that smoke it? They're offering it so they can start making money from it themselves. Do you people not get it? The Gov't's going to start getting their cut one way or another. Either through this Bill or changing 215. You better figure it out before you send things backwards.
 

j242

Member
When a new law is enacted to supercede an existing law, it will clearly say so. 19 clearly states that 215 is not affected by this legislation.

Does this wackjob that wrote this own a dispensory to? Like I keep saying. These people that make things up in order to get this bill to fail may be the same ones that will get 215 rewritten. If you think you're going to keep charging 400 bucks an ounce and the gov't isn't going to start getting their cut you're in for a big surprise...... Do you think the Gov't in Cali is offering legalization because they love Cannabis and the people that smoke it? They're offering it so they can start making money from it themselves. Do you people not get it? The Gov't's going to start getting their cut one way or another. Either through this Bill or changing 215. You better figure it out before you send things backwards.

So to clarify you are FOR prop 19 passing then? Oh and I really believe the Government when they tell me nothing will change while they are working to make those changes. Prop 19 means no more cultivation for the little guy. All this will change as the law comes into effect and there is NOTHING any of us can do about it.

:tiphat:
 
ive disputed this bullshit article in several threads but in short ill do it again here



I.tc2010 states it is "intended to limit enforcement of law" this sentence is very important and succinct.

II.the "rule of three" in the strictest legal sense is complete bullshit. the bill defines city/local government as follows "(vi) “local government” means a city, county, or city and county."

III.the "error of omission" this is just not how law works. tc2010 does not specifically mention murder but P.C.187 will be unaffected.

the truth is this.

after tc2010 if i want to grow pot for me in my home i can do so without having to ask the government or pay a fucking hack "doctor" to write me a recommendation for my hangnail.

When a new law is enacted to supercede an existing law, it will clearly say so. 19 clearly states that 215 is not affected by this legislation.

Does this wackjob that wrote this own a dispensory to? Like I keep saying. These people that make things up in order to get this bill to fail may be the same ones that will get 215 rewritten. If you think you're going to keep charging 400 bucks an ounce and the gov't isn't going to start getting their cut you're in for a big surprise...... Do you think the Gov't in Cali is offering legalization because they love Cannabis and the people that smoke it? They're offering it so they can start making money from it themselves. Do you people not get it? The Gov't's going to start getting their cut one way or another. Either through this Bill or changing 215. You better figure it out before you send things backwards.


for repetition.
 

JJScorpio

Thunderstruck
ICMag Donor
Veteran
I think some people need to read the Bill as it seems some have not.

“except as permitted under Health and Safety Section 11362.5 and 11362.7 through 11362.9″.

This section explicitly exempts California’s medical marijuana statutes, patients, and providers or caregivers from the provisions of ROT 2010.
 

vta

Active member
Veteran
Here is a link to the blog again..click the butt :moon:

Read the comments...there are a few that show how she is blatantly wrong, misguided and just plain ignorant of the law.

But hey...makes for great fear mongering

Then check out this blog...for a rebuttal and a dose of common sense.

Does this wackjob that wrote this own a dispensory to?

She's a professional stoner!

picture.php


dragonfly

* Gender: Female
* Industry: Communications or Media
* Occupation: writer and professional stoner
* Location: san francisco : california : United States

About Me

i am a long-time pro-marijuana activist and professional stoner. i travel the world, find the best ganja, smoke it, and write about it for pot magazines (cannabis culture magazine, west coast cannabis, and skunk). i am the global ganja correspondent for "cannabis planet," a tv news show focused on cannabis news around the world. follow my column, "getting high with dragonfly," in which every month i evaluate a different strain.
 

Strapped

Member
lol, would people prefer that it just remains illegal? We would go to jail now for growing. Even if you are legit under prop 215. It is still happening.

Passing this initiative would make the rest of the country begin to wake up and at least get the ball rolling like it did with prop 215.

I don't think the feds will stop busting everyone until it becomes legal on a national level. By that time, it will probably be regulated just like beer.

To you people who are "holding out" for a better law to come up. Keep in mind that all laws can be amended.

By making all possession for people over 21 illegal, it ELIMINATES police probable cause relating to MJ. If they smell it, they still need consent to search. That also means that for them to prove you are growing in an area larger than 5'x5', they have to see it with their own eyes and that means entering your grow space without a warrant.
 
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