Help us improve in just 2 minutes—share your thoughts in our reader survey.

Arkansas Decriminalize Marijuana and Regulate Cannabis Industry Amendment (2020)

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Arkansas Decriminalize Marijuana and Regulate Cannabis Industry Amendment
Flag of Arkansas.png
Election date
November 3, 2020
Topic
Marijuana
Status
Not on the ballot
Type
Constitutional amendment
Origin
Citizens


The Arkansas Decriminalize Marijuana and Regulate Cannabis Industry Amendment was not on the ballot in Arkansas as an initiated constitutional amendment on November 3, 2020.

This measure would have decriminalized marijuana at the state and local level and create the Bureau of Cannabis Control to oversee and regulate the cannabis industry.[1]

Text of measure

Popular name

The popular name for this initiative would have been as follows:[1]

Arkansas Cannabis Industry Amendment[2]

Full text

The full text of the measure is available here.

Path to the ballot

See also: Laws governing the initiative process in Arkansas

The state process

In Arkansas, the number of signatures required to qualify an initiated constitutional amendment for the ballot is equal to 10 percent of the votes cast for governor in the most recent gubernatorial election. Proponents must collect signatures equaling at least half of the designated percentage of gubernatorial votes in at least 50 of the state's counties. Signatures remain valid until the date of the next general election following the certification of ballot language. Signature petitions must be submitted four months prior to the election at which the measure is to appear.

The requirements to get initiated constitutional amendments certified for the 2020 ballot:

If the secretary of state certifies that enough signatures were submitted in a petition, the initiative is put on the ballot. If a petition fails to meet the signature requirement, but the petition has at least 75 percent of the valid signatures needed, petitioners have 30 days to collect additional signatures or demonstrate that rejected signatures are valid.

Details about this initiative

  • Claire Danner filed the initiative.[3]
  • Sponsors did not publish the initiative in a newspaper of general statewide circulation before the June 3, 2020, deadline. Therefore, the initiative did not qualify for the 2020 ballot.[4][5]

See also

External links

Footnotes