Pubdate: [Sat, 28 Dec 1996] Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Author: Dale H. Gieringer Editor -- As an ex-federal bureaucrat from New York, Joe Califano has some nerve complaining that California's Prop 215 was the work of ``out-of-state elites'' intending to legalize drugs (Open Forum, December 10). As one of the organizers of Prop 215, I can attest that its intent was entirely medical, namely to relieve the suffering of the many patients who need marijuana for medicine and were being denied legal access to it. From the beginning, Prop 215 was the work of an informal, volunteer coalition of Californians, who labored over five years on a shoestring budget to bring public pressure to bear on the medical marijuana issue. We were gratified by the support of the public, the press and the Legislature, which responded by twice passing medical marijuana bills, only to be vetoed by Governor Wilson. At that point, we realized that our only alternative was to seek a ballot initiative. To succeed, we knew we would need far more money than we had ever raised before. After innumerable fruitless appeals, we were gratified to receive the support of a group of philanthropists led by Mr. Soros. Yet it was not the money, but the sentiment of 5 million California voters that settled the matter. Long before the Prop 215 campaign started, the great majority of Californians knew that marijuana is medicine and should be available to those who need it. The voters were not hoodwinked, but rightly cast a vote of no confidence in Califano's ilk and the drug enforcement establishment in approving Prop 215. DALE H. GIERINGER Friends of Proposition 215 Berkeley