Everything you need to know about ranked-choice voting in one spot. Click to learn more!

Washington Recreational Marijuana Agency Measure, Initiative 1375 (2015)

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Not on Ballot
Proposed ballot measures that were not on a ballot
This measure was not put
on an election ballot

The Washington Recreational Marijuana Agency Measure, Initiative 1375 was not on the November 3, 2015 ballot in the state of Washington as an Initiative to the People. If approved by voters, the measure would have done the following:[1]

  • Created a government recreational cannabis agency
  • Eliminated certain crimes and civil forfeiture
  • Limited local authority over marijuana licensees
  • Required police body cameras
  • Modifed other marijuana-related laws

Text of measure

Ballot title

The official ballot title was as follows:[1]

Initiative Measure No. 1375 concerns marijuana, also known as cannabis.

This measure would create a government recreational cannabis agency and require certain rules, eliminate certain crimes and civil forfeiture, limit local power over marijuana licensees; require police body-cameras; and modify other marijuana-related laws.

Should this measure be enacted into law? Yes [ ] No [ ][2]

Ballot summary

The ballot summary was as follows:[1]

TThis measure would create a state cannabis commission with a recreational cannabis board directed to rework taxes on recreational marijuana, examine pesticides and marijuana testing, and adopt certain rules. Rules must allow certain growing, possession, public consumption, and not-for-profit transfers of cannabis. The measure also prevents local government from precluding siting of recreational marijuana licensees, bars most marijuana-related crimes and forfeitures, requires police body cameras, prohibits housing discrimination, and makes other changes to marijuana-related laws.[2]

Full text

The full text of the measure is available here.[1]

Support

This measure was sponsored by Kirk Ludden. Supporters called the measure the "Cannabis for recreational use 3."[1]

Path to the ballot

See also: Laws governing the initiative process in Washington

Supporters were required to collect at least 246,372 valid signatures by July 2, 2015, in order to land the initiative on the ballot.

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Washington Secretary of State, "Proposed Initiatives to the People - 2015: I-1375," accessed February 16, 2015
  2. 2.0 2.1 Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.