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Marijuana Legalization: Sensible B.C. Raises Cash, Needs Volunteers

Sensible B.C. Has More $$$ In The Bank Than People
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Sensible B.C. has at least $200,000 in the bank as organizer Dana Larsen sets out on a province-wide tour to sign up canvassers who will help him push for a referendum on marijuana.

The money comes from Bob Erb, a Terrace pot activist who won a $25 million Lotto Max jackpot last year and later earmarked $1 million to promote the cause of legalization.

Erb's donation is going to expenses such as office rental, printing flyers and paying two full-time staff in Sensible B.C.'s Vancouver office, but Larsen has found that mailings are taking up a heavy proportion of his budget.

"All of these actual petition forms have to be sent from canvassers to our office," he told The Huffington Post B.C.

"We're looking at easily $10,000 or more just to mail stuff over the next couple of months."

Larsen will hit Squamish, Prince George and "pretty much every town in between" next week to sign up canvassers who will collect signatures for a petition to force a referendum on the Sensible Policing Act, which would stop B.C. police from using resources to enforce marijuana laws.

The petition needs the signatures of 10 per cent of voters in every riding, and Larsen said he has 600 out of a hoped-for 6,000 canvassers signed up already.

Sensible B.C. has been endorsed by Stop the Violence B.C. (STVBC), a group pushing for the taxing and regulation of cannabis that has the support of high-profile names like former premier Ujjal Dosanjh and former B.C. attorney-general Geoff Plant.

"I'm hoping to get some positive comments and words of support out of those kinds of people over the coming weeks," Larsen said.

STVBC founder Evan Wood said the group is "philosophically in support" of Sensible B.C. but is not involved in the campaign in any formal way, though he added that he would be willing to come out publicly and support the initiative himself.

"There's obviously official support there and it's just a very difficult process of getting these different individuals and groups together sometimes," he said.

"I think people who support a health and safety approach to cannabis are certainly in support of Sensible B.C."

But marijuana decriminalization could run into plenty of issues if the initiative passes.

Kash Heed, former B.C. attorney-general and a former chief of the West Vancouver Police Department, expects that the RCMP and the provincial government will put up roadblocks to the Sensible Policing Act if it passes, The Georgia Straight reported.

"They’ll use the easy way out, and say this is a federal issue."

Heed said that marijuana enforcement is applied inconsistently in B.C., especially outside Vancouver.

"You just have to step outside of the jurisdiction of Vancouver and you find a different practice in place by the RCMP," he said.

Also on HuffPost

BC's Marijuana History
Asiatic Exclusion League Riot in Vancouver(01 of10)
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1907: An anti-Asian riot by the Asiatic Exclusion League tears through Vancouver's Chinatown. (credit:Library and Archives Canada)
Opium and Narcotic Drug Act(02 of10)
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1911: After William Lyon MacKenzie King's Opium Act of 1908, Vancouver's chief of police supports the Opium and Narcotic Drug Act, which prohibits the use of opium, cocaine or morphine. (credit:Wikimedia commons)
Cannabis added to Opium and Narcotics Drug Act(03 of10)
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1923: Cannabis is added to the Opium and Narcotics Drug Act. (credit:Eric Risberg/Associated Press)
Controlled Drugs and Substances Act(04 of10)
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1996: Jean Chretien's Liberal government passes the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, which imposes a maximum three-year jail sentence and a $5,000 fine for any contraventions. (credit:WikiMedia)
Bill C-38(05 of10)
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2002: Urged on by Justice Minister Martin Cauchon, the Liberal government, tries to push through Bill C-38, an act to amend the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act and other legislation to permit possession of marijuana with only a fine as punishment. The bill died during prorogation. (credit:WikiMedia Commons)
Marc Emery(06 of10)
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2010: Vancouver pro-pot activist Marc Emery (seen on the poster) is extradited to the United States to face drug charges relating to his seed-selling business. (credit:Alamy)
InSite(07 of10)
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2011: The Supreme Court of Canada rules that InSite, a safe injection facility on the Downtown Eastside, can continue to provide services for addicts. (credit:Alamy)
Stephen Harper(08 of10)
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2012: Conservative government under Prime Minister Stephen Harper passes an omnibus crime bill with mandatory minimum sentences for possession of marijuana. (credit:Alamy)
Dana Larsen(09 of10)
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2012: Activist Dana Larsen starts an initiative petition in B.C. to stop police from enforcing simple possession-and-use laws for adults. He later withdraws the petition, saying he wants more time to organize volunteers. (credit:WikiMedia)
Washington State legalizes marijuana(10 of10)
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2012: Washington state legalizes recreational use of marijuana as part after a referendum passes during the U.S. presidential election. Supporters include travel guide author Rick Steves. (credit:Elaine Thompson/AP)

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