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- Newsgroups: alt.hemp
- Date: 22 Jun 93 17:49 PDT
- Subject: Act to Legalize It
-
- This is a bill to legalize, tax, and regulate cannabis cultivation
- and over the counter sales in the State of Oregon. The following
- legislation has been through over a hundred drafts and revisions,
- over a period of more than three years. Feel free to use it, edit it,
- print and circulate it, debate it, revise it, lobby for it, and adapt
- it to meet your goals of legalization. I have researched all the
- international treaties that govern cannabis regulation and I
- believe that this is in full compliance with the provision of all
- of these treaties (Single Convention Treaty of 1961, UN Treaty on
- Psychotropic Drugs of 1974 and its amendments of 1989, etc.) For
- further details please email your inquiries to me at:
- treefreeeco@igc.apc.com
- Sincerely Yours,
- D. Paul Stanford
-
- The Oregon Cannabis Control Act
-
- Whereas the people of the State of Oregon find that Cannabis
- hemp is an environmentally beneficial crop that:
- (a) Yields more than four times more paper than timber, more
- protein than any crop except soya beans, and more methanol than
- corn;
- (b) Yields cloth and paper of superior strength and
- durability without the application of pesticides during
- cultivation and without production of cancer-causing pollutants
- during processing; and,
- (c) Yields a substance that relieves the suffering of many
- ill people without life-threatening side effects; and,
- Whereas the people find that, despite misinformation
- concocted to justify cannabis prohibition, the courts of Alaska,
- Hawaii and Michigan have noted presidential commission findings,
- scientific studies, and learned treatises which:
- (a) Characterize cannabis as a relatively harmless,
- nonaddictive euphoriant used for over 10,000 years without a
- single lethal overdose by people seeking enhanced social
- interactions, heightened perception and creativity, personal and
- spiritual insights, and relief from pain and tension;
- (b) Demonstrate that moderate cannabis intoxication causes
- very little impairment of psychomotor functions; reveal no
- significant physical, biochemical, or mental abnormalities
- attributable solely to cannabis use; and that long-term, heavy
- cannabis users do not deviate significantly from their social
- peers in terms of mental function;
- (c) Disprove the "stepping stone" or "gateway drug" argument
- that cannabis use leads to other drugs; rather, that lies taught
- about cannabis, once discovered, destroy the credibility of valid
- warnings against other truly dangerous drugs;
- (d) Indicate that cannabis users are less likely to commit
- violent acts than alcohol users, refute the argument that
- cannabis causes criminal behavior, and suggest that most users
- avoid aggressive behavior, even in the face of provocation; and
- (e) Declare that cannabis use does not constitute a public
- health problem of any significant dimension; finds no rational
- basis for treating cannabis as more dangerous than alcohol; and
- judge cannabis to be, overall, the least harmful intoxicant; and
- Whereas the people find that cannabis is Oregon's largest
- cash crop, indicating that cannabis prohibition has failed; and
- Whereas the people of the State of Oregon find that cannabis
- does not cause the social ills that its prohibition was intended
- to guard against; rather, that most of the social ills attributed
- to cannabis result from its unreasonable prohibition which:
- (a) Fosters a black market that exploits children, provides
- an economic subsidy for gangs, and sells cannabis of questionable
- purity and uncertain potency;
- (b) Generates enormous, untaxed, illicit profits that debase
- our economy and corrupt our justice system; and,
- (c) Wastes police efforts, clogs our courts, and drains the
- public resources to no good effect; and,
- Whereas, the people recall that alcohol prohibition had
- caused many of the same social ills before being replaced by
- regulatory laws which, ever since, have granted alcohol users the
- privilege of buying alcohol from state licensees, imposed strict
- penalties protecting children, delivered alcohol of sure potency,
- and generated substantial public revenues; and,
- Whereas the people hold that cannabis prohibition is a
- sumptuary law of a nature repugnant to our constitution's framers
- and which is, on its face, so unreasonable and liberticidal as
- to:
- (a) Arbitrarily violate the rights of cannabis users to be
- secure against unreasonable search and seizure as guaranteed to
- them by Article 1, Section 6 of the Oregon Constitution;
- (b) Unreasonably impose felony burdens on the cannabis users
- while the state grants special privileges to alcohol users, which
- violates Article 1, Section 20 of the Oregon Constitution;
- (c) Unnecessarily proscribe consumption of an "herb bearing
- seed" given to the people in Genesis 1:29, thereby violating
- their unqualified religious rights under Article 1, Section 3 and
- their Natural Rights under Article 1, Section 33 of the Oregon
- Constitution; and,
- (d) Irrationally subvert the ends to which, in its Preamble,
- the Oregon Constitution was ordained and the purposes, in Article
- 1, Section 1, for which our government was instituted; now,
- Therefore, the people find that the constitutional ends of
- justice, order, and the perpetuation of liberty; the governmental
- purposes of preserving the peace, safety, and happiness of the people;
- and the vitality of the other constitutional provisions cited above,
- demand the replacement of a costly, self-defeating prohibition
- with regulatory laws controlling cannabis cultivation, potency,
- sale, and use; defining and prohibiting cannabis abuse;
- protecting children with a comprehensive drug education program
- and strict penalties for the sale or provision of cannabis to
- minors; funding a state drug abuse treatment program; and raising
- substantial revenues for public education.
- Wherefore, be it enacted by the people of the State of
- Oregon, the laws relating to cannabis are revised as follows:
- Section 1. This Act shall operate uniformly throughout
- Oregon and fully replace and supersede all statutes, municipal
- charter enactments, and local ordinances relating to cannabis.
- Section 2. Section 3 of this Act creates an ORS chapter 474
- titled the "Oregon Cannabis Control Act." Legislative Counsel
- shall move and renumber existing provisions of chapter 474.
- Section 3. 474.005 Definitions. As used in this chapter:
- (1) "Abuse" means repetitive or excessive drug use such that
- the individual fails to fulfill a statutory or common law duty,
- including but not limited to the duties owed by parents to
- children, by motorists to pedestrians and other motorists, and by
- employees to employers, fellow employees, and the public.
- (2) "Cannabis" means the flowering tops and all parts,
- derivatives, or preparations of the cannabis plant, also known as
- "marijuana", containing cannabinols in concentrations established
- by the commission to be psychoactive, but does not include "hemp"
- as defined by ORS 474.005(5).
- (3) "Commission" means the Liquor Control Commission.
- (4) "Cultivation" means growing the cannabis plant.
- (5) "Hemp" means the seeds, stems, and stalks of the cannabis
- plant, and all other parts, products, and by-products of the
- cannabis plant not containing cannabinols in concentrations
- established by the commission to be psychoactive.
- (6) "Person" means a natural individual or corporate entity
- of any kind whatsoever.
- 474.015 Short Title. This chapter may be cited as the
- "Oregon Cannabis Control Act."
- 474.025 Purpose of the Oregon Cannabis Control Act. This
- chapter shall be liberally construed so as to minimize the abuse
- of cannabis; to prevent the sale or provision of cannabis to
- minors; and to protect the peace, safety, and happiness of the
- Oregon people while preserving to them the largest measure of
- liberty consistent with the above purposes.
- 474.035 Powers and duties of the commission, licenses for
- cultivation and processing. (1) The commission shall have the
- powers necessary to carry out the provisions of this chapter. It
- shall make such rules and regulations as will discourage and
- minimize the diversion of cannabis to illicit sale or use within
- the state, the illicit importation and sale of cannabis
- cultivated or processed outside the state, and the illicit export
- or removal of cannabis from the state. The commissions
- jurisdiction shall extend to any person licensed under this
- chapter to cultivate or process cannabis, but shall not extend to
- any person who manufactures products from hemp.
- (2) The commission shall issue to any qualified applicant a
- license to cultivate cannabis for sale to the commission. The
- license shall specify the areas, plots, and extent of lands to be
- cultivated. The commission shall equitably apportion the purchase
- of cannabis among licensees and, unless applications fail to meet
- expected demand, shall not purchase from any one licensee more
- than one one-thousandth of the total purchased.
- (3) The commission shall issue licenses to process cannabis
- to qualified applicants who submit successful bids. Licensed
- processors shall, as specified by the commission, contract, cure,
- extract, refine, mix, and package the entire cannabis crop and
- deliver it to the commission's physical possession as soon as
- possible, but not later than four months after harvest.
- 474.045 Commission to sell cannabis at cost for medical
- purposes. The Commission shall sell cannabis at cost:
- (a) To Oregon pharmacies for use under a physician's order
- for glaucoma, nausea related to chemotherapy, AIDS, or any other
- condition for which cannabis is an effective treatment; and,
- (b) To recognized Oregon medical research facilities for use
- in research directed toward expanding medical and sociological
- knowledge of the composition, effects, uses, and abuse of
- cannabis, to include studies of cannabis purchasers voluntarily
- participating through state liquor stores under ORS 474.055.
- 474.055 Commission to set price and sell through state
- liquor stores. The commission shall sell cannabis through the
- state liquor stores and shall set the retail price of cannabis to
- minimize incentives to purchase cannabis elsewhere and to
- purchase cannabis for resale or for removal to other states.
- 474.065 Qualifications of purchasers and licensees, effect
- of conviction. (1) To be qualified to purchase, cultivate, or
- process cannabis, a person must be over 21 years of age and not
- have been convicted of sale of cannabis to minors or convicted
- under this chapter of unlicensed cultivation or sale of cannabis.
- (2) Conviction for cultivation or sale of cannabis to other
- than minors, when committed prior to the effective date of this
- chapter, shall be expunged from the criminal records of the state
- upon petition of the offender and shall not be grounds for denial
- of an application for a license under this chapter.
- 474.075 Disposition of license fees and profits from sale of
- cannabis by state. (1) The commission shall collect license
- fees which shall be calculated and continually appropriated to
- defray the commission's administrative costs of issuing licenses
- under this chapter and the Attorney General's costs of litigation
- in defense of the validity of this chapter's provisions and in
- defense of persons subjected to criminal or civil liability for
- actions licensed or required under this chapter.
- (2) All money from the sale of cannabis shall be remitted to
- the State Treasurer for credit to a cannabis account, from which
- sufficient money shall be continually appropriated:
- (a) To reimburse the commission for the costs of purchasing,
- processing, testing, grading, shipping, storing, and selling
- cannabis; of regulating, inspecting, and auditing licensees; and
- of research studies required by this chapter; and,
- (b) To reimburse the Attorney General's office for costs of
- enforcing this chapter's criminal provisions.
- (3) All money remaining in the cannabis account after
- reimbursement of the related commission and Attorney General
- costs shall be profits which the State Treasurer shall distribute
- quarterly as follows:
- (a) Sixty percent shall be distributed to the state's school
- districts, appropriated by enrollment, and shall continually
- appropriated to fund all public education programs except drug
- education programs under ORS 474,075(3)(d).
- (b) Thirty percent shall be distributed to the state's
- institutions of higher education, appropriated by enrollment, and
- shall be continually appropriated to fund and expand such
- institutions to the end that more Oregon residents may attend and
- tuition costs may be lowered.
- (c) Five percent shall be credited to the department of
- Human Resources and shall be continually appropriated to fund a
- drug abuse treatment program providing medical and psychiatric
- treatment to drug abusers on demand and on diversion from the
- courts. The director shall design the program in consultation
- with the Council on Alcohol and Drug Problems.
- (d) Five percent shall be distributed to the state's school
- districts, appropriated by enrollment, and shall be continually
- appropriated to fund a drug education program which shall:
- (I) Emphasize a citizen's rights and duties under our
- social compact and to explain to students how drug abusers injure
- the rights of others by failing to fulfill such duties;
- (II) Persuade students to decline to consume intoxicants
- by providing them with accurate information about the threat
- intoxicants pose to their mental and physical development; and,
- (III) Persuade students that if, as adults, they choose to
- consume intoxicants, they must nevertheless responsibly fulfill
- all duties they owe others.
- 474.085 Commission to establish psychoactive concentrations
- of cannabinols. The commission, based on findings made in
- consultation with the Board of Pharmacy as to cannabinol
- concentrations which produce intoxication and the economics of
- residual resin extraction, shall establish reasonable
- concentrations of cannabinols deemed psychoactive under this
- chapter.
- 474.095 Commission to set standards, test purity, grade
- potency of cannabis, label contents. (1) The commission, in
- consultation with the State Board of Pharmacy, shall set
- standards which the commission shall apply:
- (a) To test and reject cannabis containing adulterants in
- concentrations known to harm people; and,
- (b) To grade cannabis potency by measuring the
- concentrations of psychoactive cannabinols it contains.
- (2) The commission shall affix to cannabis packages a label
- which shall bear the state seal, a certification of purity, a
- grade of potency, the date of harvest, a warning as to the
- potential for abuse, and notice of laws prohibiting resale,
- removal from the state, public consumption, and provision and
- sale to minors.
- 474.105 Commission may limit purchases. The commission may
- limit the quantity of cannabis purchased by a person at one time
- or over any length of time and may refuse to sell cannabis to any
- person who violates this chapter's provisions or abuses cannabis
- within the meaning of ORS 474.005(1).
- 474.115 Unlicensed cultivation or sale, removal from the
- state, penalties. Unlicensed cultivation and removal from the
- state of cannabis shall be Class A misdemeanors, and cultivation
- for sale, removal from the state for sale, and sale of cannabis,
- without commission authority, shall be Class C felonies.
- 474.125 Sale or provision to minors, penalties, exception.
- The sale or gratuitous provision of cannabis shall be a Class A
- felony, except when to a minor over 18 years of age under the
- conditions provided by ORS 471.030(1) for alcohol.
- 474.135 Fine as additional penalty. In addition to other
- penalties and in lieu of any civil remedy, conviction of sale or
- unlicensed cultivation for sale under ORS 474.115 or 474.125
- shall be punishable by a fine which the court shall determine
- will deprive an offender of any profits from the criminal
- activity.
- 474.145 Acquisition by minors, penalty. Except as provided
- by ORS 474.125, the purchase, attempt to purchase, possession, or
- acquisition of cannabis by a person under 21 years of age shall
- be a violation punishable by a fine of not more than $250.
- 474.155 Public consumption prohibited, penalty, exception.
- Except where prominent signs permit and minors are neither
- admitted nor employed, public consumption of cannabis shall be a
- violation punishable by a fine of not more than $250.
- 474.205 Commission to study methods of safe use, potential
- for abuse, establish cannabis levels for presumption of
- intoxication. The commission, in consultation with the Board of
- Pharmacy and the Council on Alcohol and Drug Problems, and by
- grants to accredited research facilities, shall:
- (a) Study methods of safe use and the potential for, and ill
- effects of, abuse of cannabis, and shall report its findings in a
- pamphlet distributed at state liquor stores; and,
- (b) Study cannabis intoxication and, if practicable, shall
- establish by rule levels above which a person shall be presumed
- intoxicated.
- 474.215 Presumption of negligence. In civil cases, a
- rebuttable presumption of negligence shall arise upon clear and
- convincing evidence that a person's intoxication by cannabis at
- the time of injury materially contributed to the cause of injury.
- 474.305 Disclosure of names and addresses prohibited.
- Information on applicants, licensees, and purchasers under this
- chapter shall not be disclosed except upon the person's request.
- 474.315 Effect, Attorney General's duties. If federal law is
- held to impede this chapter's full effect, unimpeded provisions
- shall remain in effect and the impeded provisions shall regain
- effect upon the impediments removal. The Attorney General shall
- vigorously defend any person prosecuted for acts licensed under
- this chapter, propose a federal act to remove impediments to this
- chapter, deliver the proposed federal act to each member of
- Congress, and urge adoption of the proposed federal act through
- all legal and appropriate means.
-