/
Opponent of marijuana vote: 'Stoned' people don't help our state

Opponent of marijuana vote: 'Stoned' people don't help our state


Opponent of marijuana vote: 'Stoned' people don't help our state

South Dakotans will vote in November over whether to legalize marijuana in their state, where an opponent of the measure is urging a “no” vote.

“More stoned people will not lead to a better state," Norman Woods, of Family Heritage Alliance, says of the Marijuana Legislation Initiative.

A "yes" vote on the referendum, also known as Measure 27, also known as the Marijuana Legalization Initiative, would allow people 21 and over to use and grow a certain amount of marijuana for personal use.

This is not the first time South Dakotans have voted on recreational marijuana. A related measure was approved in 2020 but was later overturned by the South Dakota Supreme Court. In that legal fight, a circuit judge ruled Amendment A was unconstitutional because it revised the state constitution rather than amended it.

Woods, Norman (Family Heritage Alliance) Woods

After witnessing that defeat, the group South Dakotans for Better Marijuana Laws launched a signature campaign to get the new legalization initiative for this November. The group insists the new measure is simple and easily understood, and will withstand a court challenge.

Woods says Family Heritage, based in Rapid City, is fighting this hard.

"We really don't need commercialized, full-on recreational marijuana,” he insists, “here in South Dakota.”

A poll from July shows this year's effort could fail. In that survey, 54.4% of respondents opposed legalization compared to 43.8% that support that idea. The poll surveyed 500 voters.