California voters can expect to receive free weed from some pot clubs in the Bay Area city of San Jose for casting ballots in state primary elections next Tuesday that include local races and battles for governor and secretary of state, according to Reuters.
The city's cannabis collectives, which have also offered up a voter guide to the races, are offering free marijuana and discounts when members show a ballot stub or an "I Voted" sticker on June 3, Reuters reported.
"Primary elections tend to have much lower turnout because people don't even know there's a vote that day," said Dave Hodges, a cannabis club owner and member of the Silicon Valley Cannabis Coalition, according to Reuters. "We want to help people know when to vote and who to vote for."
The group's voter guide, which focuses mostly on local races and backs Democratic candidates, promotes politicians who director John Lee describes as "friendly to the cannabis movement or at least better than the alternatives," Reuters reported.
The city of San Jose estimates there are about 80 cannabis clubs operating in the city, and the organizers of the "Weed for Votes" effort said about a dozen of the 40 shops in the collective had already agreed to participate, according to Reuters.
The pot clubs are also encouraging voters to attend a San Jose City Council meeting on Tuesday that is expected to debate proposed new regulations for medical marijuana dispensaries that they say amount to an effective ban on pot collectives, Reuters reported. It was not immediately clear if the matter would be brought to a vote on Tuesday.
The regulations would prevent collectives from working together to sell products, require them to only accept state medical marijuana cards, bar cash transactions and require all marijuana to be grown indoors at one location, according to Reuters.
Storefronts would need to maintain a distance of 1,000 feet from churches, schools, parks, libraries, community and daycare centers, Reuters reported. Dispensaries would also need to be 500 feet from drug rehabilitation centers and 150 feet from private homes.