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Douglas County, Oregon, Recreational Marijuana Cultivation, Processing, and Sales, Measure 10-143 (November 2016)

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Measure 10-143: Douglas County Recreational Marijuana
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The basics
Election date:
November 8, 2016
Status:
Defeatedd Defeated
Topic:
Local marijuana
Related articles
Local marijuana on the ballot
November 8, 2016 ballot measures in Oregon
Douglas County, Oregon ballot measures
Oregon Measure 91 (2014)
See also
Douglas County, Oregon
Oregon 2016 ballot measures

A measure allowing voters to decide whether or not to allow medical and recreational marijuana retail in the unincorporated areas of the county was on the ballot for voters in Douglas County, Oregon, on November 8, 2016. It was defeated.

Voting "yes" was a vote in favor of allowing recreational marijuana cultivation and sales within the unincorporated areas of Douglas County.
Voting "no" was a vote against this measure and in favor of prohibiting recreational marijuana cultivation and sales within the unincorporated areas of Douglas County.

This measure was designed to allow voters to decide whether or not to allow facilities to sell recreational marijuana within the unincorporated boundaries of Douglas County. This measure would not have affected incorporated cities within the county, such as Roseburg or Sutherlin.[1]

Election results

Douglas County Measure 10-143
ResultVotesPercentage
Defeatedd No28,58554.86%
Yes 23,525 45.14%
Election results from Douglas County Elections Office

Text of measure

Ballot question

The following ballot question appeared on the ballot:[2]

Shall recreational marijuana businesses (producers, processors, wholesalers, and retailers) be allowed in unincorporated areas (outside city limits) of Douglas County?[3]

Ballot summary

The following summary of Measure 10-143 appeared on the ballot:[2]

Douglas County adopted an ordinance (Ordinance No. 2015-07-03) referring to the voters of the county the question whether to allow recreational marijuana businesses (producers, processors, wholesalers, and retailers) in unincorporated areas (outside city limits) of Douglas County. This ballot measure asks you to answer that question. A "yes" vote allows recreational marijuana businesses in unincorporated Douglas County. A "no" vote does not allow recreational marijuana businesses in unincorporated Douglas County. The ordinance and this ballot measure do not affect the personal use of recreational marijuana under Measure 9'1. This ballot measure also does not affect the separate ballot measure concerning medical marijuana businesses in unincorporated areas (outside city limits) of Douglas County. The ordinance and this ballot measure also do not affect whether recreational marijuana businesses will be allowed inside the city limits of any city in the county -- that decision will be up to the city council and voters of each city.[3]

Support

Arguments in favor

Richard Chasm, a member of the Umpqua Cannabis Association, argued in favor of allowing marijuana cultivators, dispensaries, and facilities in the unincorporated areas of the county. He argued that the rural areas of Douglas County had perfect conditions for marijuana cultivation and that allowing the industry to operate would boost the county's economy. Chasm said, "This could be a tremendous economic benefit to Douglas County, a tremendous economic benefit to rural people, rural landowners, farmers, family farmers."[4]

Kay Bjornson, another advocate of legal marijuana sales within the county, said, "What are we going to do? Are we going to lay back and shoot ourselves in the foot and piss away the opportunity to make Douglas County the marijuana-growing capital of the world, or at least the U.S.?"[4]

Scott Newman, a veteran, argued that marijuana had helped him through depression. He said, "Cannabis has done for me in four years what the VA couldn't do in a decade with all the medications in their pharmacopoeia."[4]

Opposition

Arguments in against

Rev. Clint Caviness, the pastor of Victory Baptist Church in Roseburg, argued that allowing marijuana sales would be detrimental to the health of families. He said, "A high parent cannot be the best version of himself. In fact, he's often not even a functional version of himself."[4]

Lt. Patrick Moore, the director of the Douglas Interagency Narcotics Team, expressed concerns over the possibility of children getting access to marijuana, especially in the form of highly concentrated edibles. Moore stated, "Youth use goes up with every step of legitimization. Abuse goes up with every step of legitimization."[4]

County Commissioner Tim Freeman argued that there was no need for marijuana facilities in unincorporated areas of the county. He argued, "I believe the incorporated areas provide plenty of access."[4]

Background

See also: Oregon Legalized Marijuana Initiative, Measure 91 (2014)
Voting on Marijuana
Marijuana Leaf-smaller.gif
Ballot Measures
By state
By year
Not on ballot

In 2014, voters approved Measure 91, legalizing recreational marijuana in the state. According to a bill passed by Oregon legislators in 2015, however, counties and cities within which a majority of voters rejected Measure 91 can prohibit marijuana sales. In 2014, about 54.5 percent of Douglas County electors voted against Measure 91. Per state law, since fewer than 55 percent of voters in the county rejected marijuana legalization, a ban on marijuana sales can only be enacted by a public vote. In counties that featured a greater than 55 percent majority opposed to marijuana legalization, the county board of supervisors is allowed to ban marijuana sales without a public vote.[1]

Path to the ballot

This measure was put on the ballot by the county board of commissioners. When the board voted to put this measure on the ballot, County Commissioner Tim Freeman said, "Instead of three commissioners deciding, the people of Douglas County are going to be able to decide if they want this in their community or not."[1][4]

Related measures

2015 and 2016

  1. City of Brownsville Medical and Recreational Marijuana Facilities Advisory Question, Measure 22-134 (May 2015)Defeatedd

Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms Douglas County marijuana sales question Measure 10-143. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also

External links

Footnotes