Bid to put recreational marijuana on November ballot fails

File Photo By Brian Fore/Cronkite News: Arizona was the only state out of four with recreational marijuana initiatives on the ballot in 2016 in which the initiative did not pass.

By Amanda Fahey/Cronkite News

PHOENIX – Another attempt to legalize recreational marijuana in Arizona went up in smoke Thursday when Safer Arizona missed the 5 p.m. deadline to file petitions to get on the Nov. 6 ballot.

A representative of the grassroots group said Thursday afternoon that it had collected about 75,000 of the 150,625 signatures needed to qualify the Safer Arizona Cannabis Legalization Act for the ballot. According to the group’s website, it had hoped to collect 225,000 signatures; the group had been gathering signatures since November.

The initiative had six main objectives: repeal prohibition; post-conviction relief and criminal-record expungement; job creation; no discrimination; and reasonable regulation and consumer safety.

In 2010, Arizona voters narrowly passed Proposition 203, allowing the use of medical marijuana for those who hold a medical card authorized by a physician. The card allows patients to purchase and use marijuana without facing prosecution. The first dispensaries in the state opened in 2012.

In 2016, voters defeated Proposition 205, which would have made possession and consumption legal for age 21 or older. The measure lost 51.3 percent to 48.7 percent; Arizona was the only state out of four with a recreational marijuana on the ballot that did not pass in November 2016.

Safer Arizona has been a polarizing force among marijuana advocates. The group’s representatives lack professionalism and play into the “stoner” stereotype, critics say. That may alienate some supporters of the cannabis cause who don’t want to be associated with the negative connotations of marijuana use, they contend.

Other groups are waiting for the 2020 presidential election year to attempt to put recreational marijuana on the ballot again.