Hello everyone, currently in the state of Florida only medical marijuana is allowed but there is a group collecting signatures for a petition to get legalization put on the ballot for November 8, 2022. If you or someone you know lives in Florida and would like to sign the petition please go here. https://regulateflorida.com/
Good luck with your efforts!
I’ll have to look into it before I sign. Last time around the bill they were pushing heavily favored out of state major corporations and did not allow home grow. I’d rather wait if that’s the limits we let them put on us
By all means take your time and read it. That was the major issue with the last one. But this petition is for legal possession of up to one ounce of weed and allow to grow 6 plants with 3 in flowering.
The amendment was designed to legalize possession of up to one ounce of marijuana by residents at least 21 years old. Residents would be allowed to cultivate up to six plants per household, but only three or fewer plants could be mature or flowering. The plants would need to be grown in “an enclosed, locked space,” and users would not be permitted to sell the plants they grow.
Under the amendment, marijuana would be treated like alcohol - it would be prohibited for residents under 21 years of age, consumers would need to show proof of age before purchasing marijuana from retail facilities, and it would be illegal for anyone to drive while impaired or under the influence of marijuana. The amendment would also outline regulations for marijuana cultivation, retail marijuana sales, and manufacturing marijuana products.
Thank you @darkillusion I’m already involved, your doing great!
All I am doing is just spreading the word nothing more.
Interesting, thanks for sharing! I won’t hold my breath…
Florida Supreme Court rejects proposed constitutional amendment aimed at allowing people to use recreational marijuana
Jim Saunders
TALLAHASSEE — For the second time in two months, the Florida Supreme Court on Thursday rejected a proposed constitutional amendment aimed at allowing people to use recreational marijuana.
Justices, in a 5-2 decision, said a proposal by the political committee Sensible Florida included ballot wording that would mislead voters. By the same margin, the court in April rejected a recreational-pot proposal by the committee Make It Legal Florida.
During arguments in February 2020, justices appeared skeptical of the Sensible Florida proposal, which drew opposition from Attorney General Ashley Moody, the state House and groups such as the Florida Chamber of Commerce.
The proposed amendment was framed as regulating marijuana similar to alcohol. But Thursday’s ruling focused on wording in the proposed ballot summary, which voters would see when they go to the polls.
That summary said, in part, the measure would regulate marijuana “for limited use and growing” by people age 21 or older. But the Supreme Court majority said the summary was misleading because the full amendment would not limit the personal use of marijuana.
“The ballot summary here is not accurate. It falsely tells voters that the proposed amendment limits the use of recreational marijuana. Because the proposed amendment itself ‘does no such thing,’ it should not be placed on the ballot,” said the opinion, partially quoting from a court precedent about ballot initiatives.
The court majority was made up of Chief Justice Charles Canady and Justices Ricky Polston, Carlos Muniz, John Couriel and Jamie Grosshans — the same majority that scuttled the Make It Legal Florida proposal in April.
Justice Alan Lawson, in a dissent joined by Justice Jorge Labarga, acknowledged that Sensible Florida proposal was a “close case.” But he said the court should have read the ballot summary in conjunction with a ballot title that said, “Regulate Marijuana in a Manner Similar to Alcohol to Establish Age, Licensing, and Other Restrictions.”
“And the (full) amendment itself details the ways that marijuana use would be regulated similar to Florida’s current regulations affecting alcohol use,” Lawson wrote. “Therefore, reading the title and summary together, ‘limited use’ could also be understood as a reference to the regulations disclosed in the aptly descriptive title.”
Backers of proposed constitutional amendments need to submit 891,589 valid petition signatures and get Supreme Court approval of the ballot wording before they can take issues to voters in the November 2022 election. Sensible Florida had 29,172 valid signatures as of Thursday — though another 66,513 signatures had expired, according to the Florida Division of State website.
The Supreme Court rejected the Make It Legal Florida proposal for different reasons than the Sensible Florida initiative.
Justices said the ballot summary of the Make It Legal Florida measure would mislead “voters into believing that the recreational use of marijuana in Florida will be free of any repercussions, criminal or otherwise.” The conclusion of it being misleading stemmed from marijuana remaining illegal under federal law
That was expected. That petition had a lot of problems in its wording. One of these days it might make it.