MILegalize hosted a public “unity rally” at the Capitol Building in downtown
Lansing on Friday, May 20. During the rally, the pro-marijuana initiative campaign turned in a
petition with more than 315,000 signatures from Michigan residents to state
officials. The petition calls for state legislators to fully legalize cannabis
in Michigan.
Charmie Gholson,
founder and director of Michigan Moms United, was one of many representatives
who spoke at the rally.
“I am here today at the MILegalize rally
because I have worked for the last four years to try to convince the Michigan
Legislature to enact solid common sense civil asset forfeiture reforms,”
Gholson said.
Jeffrey Hank,
executive director of MILegalize, said fully legalizing marijuana in Michigan
would create 50,000 jobs, rebuild roads and fund schools. Hank said MILegalize
came up with the statistics based on Michigan’s marketing size and the
occupational use licensing numbers from Colorado, a state roughly half
Michigan’s population size, that fully legalized cannabis for both medicinal and
recreational drug use in 2014.
“Projections are based on what Michigan could
be,” Hank said.
Currently, 24
states and Washington, D.C., including Michigan, have legalized cannabis for
medical use. The Michigan Medical Marihuana Act, also known as Proposal 1, went
into effect in 2008. However, access to medical marijuana is limited to patients
obtaining it from an approved caregiver who can serve up to five patients at a
time, or growing the plant on their own.
“Cannabis
prohibition is a huge failure. It’s not working and it’s
incredibly costly," Irwin said. “(Criminalizing marijuana use) is an incredibly wasteful
and unproductive enterprise. Cannabis prohibition is un-American.”
The event was also
a general rally for social justice in Michigan, including Flint and Detroit.
“We represent just
the common people,” Hank said. “We’re not a special interests group. We want to
fix Marijuana laws but we also want to do other good things like put money into
roads, put money into schools and create jobs. Michigan is in a hurtful moment
right now. We have Flint. We have Detroit Public Schools. All these things,
right? We’re the feel good story of the year in Michigan. We’re not the sex
scandals and all the corruption and all this other crap. We are here to help
the people.”
MILegalize
said on its website it aims to put full fair marijuana legalization on the
November 2016 ballot. The campaign is already past its minimum requirement of 253,000 signatures to be included on the ballot, but will continue to gather more
signatures before June 1.