Mississippi medical marijuana initiative closes in on enough signatures for 2020 ballot – Mississippi Today

Steven Senne, Associated Press

Michael Dundas, CEO of Sira Naturals, Inc., stands for a photograph among cannabis plants, Thursday, July 12, 2018, at the Sira Naturals medical marijuana cultivation facility, in Milford, Mass.

All that stands between Mississippians and the chance to vote on the legalization of medical marijuana next year is around 30,000 petition signatures.

The group behind the Medical Marijuana 2020 ballot initiative, Mississippians for Compassionate Care, has been gathering signatures since September of 2018. Organizers say more than 57,000 of the required 86,185 signatures have been certified by state circuit clerks, but the clock is ticking as their Sept. 6 deadline approaches. Currently, over 100 people are deployed across the state gathering signatures, organizers say.

The group faces an uphill battle because getting a measure on a ballot in Mississippi is no easy task. Only six have successfully gone to a vote and just two of those, eminent domain and voter ID requirements, were voted into state law.

Last week, around 32 people gathered in the lobby of the Mississippi Museum of Art in Jackson for a public forum about the initiative. Jeff Jones, a native of Carthage and the clinical liaison for special projects at the Mississippi Department of Health, said he thinks this initiative’s focus on relieving suffering sets it part from previous efforts to legalize marijuana in the state.

“If we were trying to approve recreational marijuana, I’m not sure that would fly,” Jones said.

Jamie Grantham, the communications director for the Medical Marijuana 2020 campaign, shares a similar sentiment. The Raymond native said she decided to get involved with the campaign after a long period of prayer and after doing her own research on the plant’s medicinal benefits.

“OK if this helps people and God made the plant and gave us a directive to ‘subdue the earth and have dominion over it,’ which means we need to act responsibly with what we’ve been given to steward … I wanted to be a part of Mississippi having that,” Grantham said.

If the measure makes it onto the ballot and is passed, the health department would regulate how medical marijuana is grown, processed, and made available to patients. A total of 22 debilitating medical conditions are covered under the initiative. After being certified by a Mississippi physician, any patient suffering from one or more of those conditions would be able to receive a medical marijuana identification card from the health department. The card would cost no more than $50 and allow the patient to purchase medical marijuana from a state licensed and regulated treatment center.