I also will not debate the merits of medical marijuana, but I must again
correct Jim Bernstein's assertions about the Minneapolis petition.

(For those unfamiliar with this issue: Last summer, a group that I
coordinated submitted a charter amendment proposal through citizen
initiative. After following all of the steps required by law to properly
structure our proposal, we gathered and submitted petitions containing the
signatures of 5% of the registered voters in the city. While the signatures
were being certified by the Minneapolis Elections office, the Charter
Commission, led by Jim Bernstein, voted to recommend that City Council
prevent the question from being placed on the November ballot. At the
Commission's request, the City Attorney's office issued an opinion stating
that City Council has the power to keep a charter amendment question off of
the ballot if (in their opinion) the measure conflicts with state or federal
law. On August 20, 2004, City Council voted 8-4 to keep our proposal off of
the ballot.) 

Mr. Bernstein's continued assertion that our proposal would authorize by
charter an activity that is forbidden by state law is false. The amendment
we put forth is explicitly worded to require that the city authorize,
license and regulate the distribution of medical marijuana TO THE EXTENT
PERMITTED BY STATE AND FEDERAL LAW. The amendment is thus specifically
structured to make city action contingent upon changes in state and federal
law, and therefore does not force the city into any legal conflict.  

The intent of our amendment is to require that the city react to the
legalization of medical marijuana by implementing municipal regulation.
Unfortunately, Jim Bernstein refuses to acknowledge this contingency as
valid. Instead he steadfastly ignores the amendment's true intent, and has
used his position of leadership to assert that it is illegal. 

It was disappointing that City Council sided with the Charter Commission in
August, but the real travesty in this story is that our petition was
railroaded after the effort was complete. Any conflicts which would prevent
placement of the initiative on the ballot should have been addressed when
the Charter Commission approved the petition's language in late-2003.

In November, Minneapolis voters were prevented from deciding upon an
initiative which 12,500 residents of this city signed petitions for. Jim
Bernstein led the effort to disenfranchise these voters, and residents of
the 13th Ward should keep that in mind when considering him as a candidate
for City Council.  


Jason Samuels
Whittier
Administrative Coordinator, Citizens Organized for Harm Reduction





------------------------------

Message: 10
Date: Mon, 21 Feb 2005 01:49:13 -0600
From: "Jim Bernstein" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: 
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [email protected], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain;       charset="windows-1250"

I am not going to debate whether or not medicinal marijuana should be
legal or not but I do need to correct Mr. Halfhill's assertion about
council members Goodman and Johnson.  

Their opposition to the "referendum" (which was actually a charter
proposal and not a referendum!) was not based on opposition to medicinal
marihuana as such, but to amending the city charter to allow activity
which is forbidden by state law.  And, both agreed that if state law did
allow cities to regulate the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes, it
should be done properly by ordinance and not by charter amendment.
Council Member Goodman said quite emphatically that she believes use of
marijuana for medicinal purposes should be lawful and fully supports
efforts to make it so! 

Currently, the sale and distribution of marijuana is illegal in the
state of Minnesota.  The Minneapolis City Charter cannot permit what
state law forbids! 

Jim Bernstein
Fulton
Chair, Minneapolis Charter Commission



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