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Articles on Legalizing Marijuana

Demitri Downing trying to get Safer Arizona to give the medical marijuana dispensaries protection from legalized marijuana

  Here is an article which includes Demitri Downing, one of the authors of Prop 205, per the Phoenix Business Journal and this article also mentions it. Demitri Downing also has been trying to get Safer Arizona to write an initiative which gives the medical marijuana dispensaries protection from legalized marijuana.
Marijuana Industry Trade Association, (MITA) the brainchild of industry insider, Demitri Downing. A former tribal prosecutor and lobbyist, Downing was one of the organizers behind the shaping of 205 and created the state’s premiere cannabis event, the annual Southwest Cannabis Conference and Expo.
I think Demitri Downing's family owns a number of medical marijuana dispensaries in Arizona. I think the number I hear at Safer Arizona meetings was 6.


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After 205 Defeat AZ Cannabiz Tackles New Challenges

By admin - December 6, 2016

SCOTTSDALE, AZ — Despite facing a heartbreaking loss on election day and more threats on the horizon, leaders in Arizona’s medical marijuana industry were in high spirits this week when the group convened for their monthly meeting in Scottsdale.

The event took place Wednesday, Nov. 30th, at the lavish Saguaro Hotel. Over 200 people were on hand for an event that focused on an election post-mortem and strategies for an anticipated all-out attack on AZ Cannabis.

The only state of 9 that failed to pass its marijuana initiative in 2016, AZ’s Prop205 cannabis initiative cost the industry millions and lost by less than 3% of the vote. Prosecutors like Maricopa County’s notorious Bill Montgomery led the prohibitionist charge and, in the wake of 205’s failure, have already called to shut down the entire state’s medical program.

And that’s just one of the many challenges the industry expects to face in 2017. Right-wing prohibitionist legislators have annually attacked Arizona’s medical program since day one. So far the industry had successfully staved off every bad bill, but that was before the 205 defeat and the looming specter of Jeff Sessions as US Attorney General.

Luckily, AZ’s five-year-old cannabis industry, which has struggled to find a unified face or consistent message, appears to be coming together under the leadership of AZ’s fledgling Marijuana Industry Trade Association, the brainchild of industry insider, Demitri Downing. A former tribal prosecutor and lobbyist, Downing was one of the organizers behind the shaping of 205 and created the state’s premiere cannabis event, the annual Southwest Cannabis Conference and Expo.

“Every other successful industry has trade organizations and a legislative agenda, so it was a no-brainer that somebody needed to create one for AZ,” Downing laughs. After several attempts at industry organizing by others failed, MITA finally came together mid- 2016, initially as a fund-raising group supporting 205, and has grown to become the go-to event for industry smoozing and strategy sessions over alcohol and appetizers.

“From the beginning this was the campaign’s to lose”

That night however, the crab cakes couldn’t compete with the heavy-hitters on the MITA meeting line-up which included lobbyists, legislators and lawyers, and featured election analysis by the state’s leading marijuana writer Ray Stern, of PHX New Times. “From the beginning this was the campaign’s to lose,” Stern noted during the panel discussion which included, Downing, principle 205 author and counsel, Ryan Hurley, cannabis family law attorney, Sonia Martinez and dispensary owner, Jim Kauffman.

“Like many in the state I was worried from the beginning,” Stern explained. “The initiative was always behind in the polls. In 2010 Prop203 [the AZ MMJ initiative] was polling at 58% and we only won by 4100 votes. When this thing was going into the final weekend with only 51% polling, we were right to worry and indeed it lost by 3%.” After a bitter race that wound-up costing more than $3 million dollars to lose, and set friend versus friend, the final tally wound up being YES 1,233,323 to NO 1,233,323, less than 70,000 votes out of over two and a half million cast.

Stern noted that the bill’s very specificity left it open to attack by the right. “It was so long there was too much ammo for the opposition, and this [campaign’s] approach did nothing to battle back the charges against it.” Speaking of specific, Stern took aim at 205 campaign chair and front man, JP Holyoak, who ruled the campaign with an iron fist. “For all his strengths, JP proved a weak front man and when the opposition campaigned that the initiative was a corporate takeover of the marijuana industry, his was not the face to challenge the attack.”

AZ’s leading cannabis attorney, Ryan Hurley also complained of the choice of a conservative consulting company to shape the messaging on the campaign. “They claimed their connections on the right would help us. They did not,” Hurley said bluntly.

“The lies were off the chart on this one”

Having analyzed the campaign and the movement in dozens of articles over the part two years, Stern gave particular attention to the scope and scale of the official No-on-205 campaign led by state prosecuting attorney association leader, Sheila Polk and her “non-profit” MATFORCE, even if truthfulness wasn’t a part of their campaign. “The lies were off the chart on this one. Aside from California, more money was spent by the ‘anties’ in Arizona than in all the other battleground states combined,” Stern added. Over 4 and a half million was raised in opposition to 205 and a significant portion of that came from the efforts of Arizona Governor Doug Ducey.

In contrast, Hurley, agreed with most of Stern’s assessments, but also broached a sore spot for the industry, the fact that vast numbers of AZ’s marijuana smoking community actively worked against 205. “I have to admit the Safer/AZFMR crowd cost us 15 to 20,000 votes.” In an election with only 67,000 votes, the difference of having 20,000 voters switch from yes to no and actively campaign against 205 proved fatal.

The riff was a long time in building, dating back to 2010 and flaws in the Arizona Medical Marijuana Act itself and the MPP campaign behind it. When the 205 negotiations began in the fall of 2014, the initiative was promised to be collaboration between the national experts, MPP (the Marijuana Policy Project), the AZ dispensary association, and the activist community, represented by grassroots PAC, Safer Arizona.

The arrangement quickly broke down during the actual writing of 205 and epically collapsed in early 2015, when the activist community rejected both MPP and the dispensary industry efforts and launched their own initiative, known as the AZFMR (Arizonans for Mindful Regulation), in a move many contend was a mortal blow to the movement.

The state’s leading activist organization at the time, Safer Arizona fractured with executive director, Mikel Weisser, standing behind Prop 205 and leaving the group to helm the state chapter of NORML. Safer Arizona founder, Dave Wisniewski, re-organized his followers as a social media attack machine with the more aggressive elements of the community rallying against MPP’s initiative at every turn.

Initially, some 205 supporters fled the group to briefly join AZ-NORML, but faced relentless disruptions and non-stop online trolling by AZFMR followers. AZFMR campaign manager, Jason Medar, had previously led the successful fight against California’s Prop 19 in 2010. His group was supported by many players in the underground economy and claims to have collected over 100,000 signatures in their bid to stop MPP. Safer AZ joined forces with the AZFMR, created a massive disinformation campaign and became a powerful public presence across the state, and even larger online force pushing against legalization.

“We probably should have compromised”

Opposition from both the left and the right capitalized on what Stern termed the “monopoly/greed” factor. No-on-205 proponents from both sides challenged details of the proposed regulatory structure which would have installed 3 dispensary industry owners into the 7-member board that would have governed them. The opposition coined the term ‘Oligopoly’ and neither the industry nor the 205 campaign adequately challenged, even if it wasn’t exactly true.

In retrospect, Hurley admits that there were provisions that could have been different and garnered more support for the bill. “I now think that limiting the retail licenses as strictly as we did probably wasn’t the best idea. It was certainly used against us. Also, our language regarding DUI left the opposition wiggle room. I appreciate our intentions, but we probably should have compromised on that to protect ourselves from their attacks.”

AZ House Democratic Legislative Counsel, Jennifer Harris, who was on hand, agrees. “Language is so incredibly important. I am familiar with the actual passage the opposition ran with. It can be construed to have prevented prosecutors from getting convictions.”

“We have to play defense now. You can bet we are going to be faced with a rackful of idiotic crap,” Hurley warned and called for the industry to form itself fully and develop a lobbying presence at the state capitol. The remaining speakers hammered the point home.

John Hartsell, longtime legislative activist and reporter for Weediabuzz, insists that the climate at the state capitol is going to stay toxic for the time being and the state’s only reasonable hope for legalization must come from the ballot process. Hurley however cautioned the gathering to not get swept up in the underground movement’s supposed 2018 initiative movement. “We will get it the second time around. California did. But it won’t be 2018. Without MPP or a presidential race to mobilize the voters, we will have to wait till 2020.”

Finishing up, Hartsell urged the industry to be sure they keep “their voice in the room” at the state house, a sentiment echoed by top legislative staffer, Harris, and longtime cannabis reformer, State Representative Mark Cardenas. Cardenas, who has introduced pro-cannabis legislation in each of the past three sessions, warned about the importance of the industry keeping a close eye on next year’s legislative agenda and being prepared to fend off an expected slate of anti-cannabis bills by an empowered right wing.

In the run-up to the election the Arizona Democratic Party and Democratic state legislators rallied behind the industry and the legalization movement. In recent months, numerous state legislators even began showing up at industry events. At the October MITA meeting, Democratic House leader, Ken Clark, led a contingent of pro-cannabis legislators that pledged to protect the industry against anticipated Republican attack. Demitri Downing, called the Democrats, “the industry’s firewall.”

MITA will soon get a chance to test that firewall. Bills are already being filed at the state legislature ahead of the upcoming session that opens Jan. 9th. Before leaving the podium, Ryan Hurley once more challenged the room to rise-up and prepare for the upcoming legislative session, “Expect attacks to the medical program. They’re gonna happen. We have to get back up and get ready to fight, we have no other choice.”

 


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