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City of Montrose Marijuana Decriminalization Proposal (February 2015)

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A Marijuana Decriminalization Proposal was on the ballot for Montrose voters in Genesee County, Michigan, on February 24, 2015. It was defeated.[1]

Proponents originally sought to put this measure on the November 4, 2014 election ballot.

If approved, this initiative measure would have removed any criminal penalties attached to possession and use of small amounts of marijuana. Specifically, the measure would have made it legal for any adult above the age of 21 to possess, use or transfer up to an ounce of marijuana on private property.[2]

Initiative efforts to decriminalize small amounts of marijuana were announced in 18 cities throughout Michigan for 2014 ballots. Eleven qualified for the November 2014 ballot, while two were postponed to 2015 ballots, and three did not make the ballot at all. Two were approved on August 5, 2014.[3][4]

Chuck Ream, executive director of the Safer Michigan Coalition, said, “Our goal is to try to have democracy recognized. Success would be if the [state] Legislature passes decriminalization.”[2]

Election results

Montrose Marijuana Proposal
ResultVotesPercentage
Defeatedd No12057.7%
Yes 88 42.3%
Election results from the Washington Times

Background

As of 2014, the Safer Michigan Coalition, which was founded and run by Tim Beck, Chuck Ream and Justin Soffa, had been active in supporting pro-marijuana efforts in the state of Michigan for several years. Chuck Ream and Tim Beck had been working together for a decade on pro-marijuana efforts. The organization was dedicated to defending the Michigan Medical Marijuana Act, approved in 2008. The group was also largely responsible for 14 local ballot measure victories, including five in 2012 and three in 2013.[5]

Past local marijuana measures in Michigan

Ream said, “In order to have some change you’ve got to have some way for the voters to express their opinion. In a city in Michigan you can run a citizen’s initiative.” The method was not available, however, for general law townships or counties. Macomb County and Wayne County were the only two charter counties in Michigan, and the charters of both counties allow for initiative and referendum. The Safer Michigan Coalition stated that it had its eye on pro-marijuana proposals in each county for 2015.[6]

Ream explained that the Safer Michigan Coalition created a template and provided support so that local activists could put various initiatives reforming marijuana use enforcement on the ballot. The different recipes offered by the coalition included:[5]

Ream expounded on the benefits of running local pro-marijuana efforts, saying, “These local initiatives are really, really cheap, compared to anything that can be done on a state level. For a few thousand dollars we can show that the average voter doesn’t support cannabis prohibition any longer.” Ream said that, although statewide petitions have been successful, the expense — at least a million dollars — of running a statewide campaign was somewhat daunting. Ream did say, “Every time that we give the voice to the voters they reject cannabis prohibition utterly, usually by 60% or more.” Attorney Michael Komorn stated, “I think that this strategy has been brilliant. It’s something where you can always claim victory in every year, these local initiatives.”[5]

Five local marijuana measures failed in Michigan in 2014, while eight were approved.

Safer Michigan Coalition banner

Support

Supporters

The Safer Michigan Coalition was behind this effort in Montrose.[4]

Arguments in favor

Supporters of decriminalization argued that use of small amounts of marijuana by consenting adults should not be illegal because it was not harmful, and restrictions were not enforceable. They also argued that law enforcement should focus on more dangerous crimes and that any attempt to enforce marijuana prohibition was a waste of time. Tim Beck, co-founder of the Safer Michigan Coalition, said, "Its [sic] time for law enforcement and the court system to start dealing with real crime, with real victims; not harassing consenting adults for something that should not be a crime in the first place."[3]

Opposition

Arguments against

Opponents argued that the rash of local decriminalization measures showing up across Michigan were impotent and symbolic at best since they contradicted state and federal laws outlawing marijuana. Many opponents argued that the energy and money put into these petitions could be put to better use for the communities in which the initiatives were proposed.[7]

Dave Coulter, mayor of Ferndale, a city that featured a similar decriminalization initiative in 2013, said, “My understanding is that state and federal drug laws can’t be changed at the local level. Ferndale has a history of local activism through symbolic statements like this and they certainly have their place, but in terms of effecting actual change at the city level, a focus on economic development and jobs, our neighborhoods and our schools will have a greater impact.”[7]

Many opponents of the initiative expected law enforcement officials to continue making arrests under state law despite approved local decriminalization initiatives. In Flint, one of the five cities in which decriminalization and marijuana related measures were approved in 2012, law enforcement officials said that the vote was futile as police officers would continue to cite state law in order to arrest marijuana users.[8]

Similar measures

Recreational

Medical

Other Michigan measures

See also

External links

Footnotes