SunValleyOnline wrote:AG invalidates Hailey marijuana initiatives SunValleyOnlineBy Gary Stivers
Thursday, December 27, 2007
The
Hailey City Council last Thursday decided to again put off deciding how to react to three voter-approved initiatives which ordered city officials to legalize doctor-prescribed marijuana use, cultivation of industrial hemp and to make enforcement of state and federal marijuana prohibition the lowest priority of the Hailey Police Department.
Council and mayor agreed to await the arrival of newly-elected Councilman Fritz Haemmerle in January before making a law which he'll have to live with.
City attorney Ned Williamson said Deputy Idaho Attorney General Mitchell Toryanski found three significant legal problems with the initiatives voters approved on November 6.
"None of this surprises me in the least," Williamson, a former Blaine County Prosecutor, began. "There are at least three issues, three problems with the initiatives."
Williamson reviewed Toryanski's three issues –legal conflict, free speech and the constitutional separation of cities' powers.
<span class=postbigbold>Free speech</span>
"The provision in the initiatives that require you guys to advocate for changes in law that violate your freedom of speech and freedom of political discretion," Williamson said, referring to the requirement imposed on city officials to attempt to persuade officials in other cities, the county and anyone else to promote legal use of marijuana.
Toryanski says in a brief, "The Idaho Constitution guarantees that '[e]very person may freely speak, write and publish on all subjects, being responsible for the abuse of that liberty. The right to free speech includes the right not to speak.' "
<span class=postbigbold>Legislation and Administration</span>
Williamson also noted the Idaho Constitution makes clear distinctions between cities' authority in legislation and applying or administering legislation.
Toryanski said the Idaho Supreme Court held in City of Boise v. Keep the Commandments Coalition that "while subjects of a legislative nature were allowable for local initiatives, subjects of an administrative nature were not."
City police enforce or apply city laws, they don't make them.
<span class=postbigbold>Legal conflicts</span>
Williamson said Toryanski showed two ways a local regulation –like the initiatives voters passed last month- may make and enforce any law on any subject so long as it doesn't conflict with the general laws, i.e. the Constitution.
1. The local regulation may be in direct conflict by "expressly allowing what the state disallows and vice versa;" and
2. A conflict may be implied where the state has fully occupied or preempted a particular area of regulation to the exclusion of local governmental entities. The doctrine of implied preemption applies when "the state has acted in the area in such a pervasive manner that it must be assumed that it intended to occupy the entire field of regulation."
Toryanski said provisions of initiatives 1 and 2 –medical marijuana and legalization of hemp cultivation- immunize persons from prosecution and allows what the state disallows and is outside the power of any city to enact, so no matter what kind of initiative voters may approve, state law trumps local law every time.
"The bottom line is that major provisions of the initiatives are illegal and are invalid," Williamson said. "It coincides with what I said in the past, and we have to decide how to proceed."
Williamson said the city can choose between litigating, repealing or amending the initiatives. He found nothing illegal in creating the oversight committee, since nothing forbids it.
"It's my view that that's what's left of the ordinances when you remove the illegal provisions."
<span class=postbigbold>Council, mayor respond</span>
City leaders discussed the initiatives briefly, but without Councilwoman Carol Brown, who as a Forest Service employee, is forbidden to publicly discuss anything violating federal law.
Mayor Susan McBryant asked Williamson whether city leaders had any deadline for action. Williamson said the requirement to enact an oversight committee is all that survives of the ordinances, but added he wouldn't hurry.
"This is such a unique situation, I feel very comfortable with you guys taking your time trying to figure out how to deal with it," Williamson said.
McBryant said she'd rather not act with only half of her council at the table.
With Councilwoman Martha Burke away, the two councilors remaining –Don Keirn and Rick Davis – weren't in much of a hurry.
"I've got a question on that committee," Keirn said. "Since everything else is illegal, what the hell are they going to talk about?"
"They can talk about the various provisions and make recommendation to you whether we should… I guess they can advocate changes, if they like…"
"Everybody needs another committee going nowhere," Keirn mused darkly.
Councilman and Mayor-elect Rick Davis wondered about naming members to the committee.
"I'd want at least three out of the four council people present –those who can participate in the discussion- before a decision is made," Davis said.
McBryant noted incoming Councilman-elect Fritz Haemmerle will also be affected by the city's decision. Williamson offered to summarize the attorney general's decision for Haemmerle, though as a former Blaine County Prosecutor, he's likely to be aware of the AG's position on the matter.
For anyone interested in reading the full text of Deputy AG Toryanski's opinion, the file in .pdf form can be found
here.
The upshot appears to be that the Liberty Lobby sold Hailey voters an erroneous bill of goods in initiative language which violates state law, something Idaho cities aren't allowed to do.