Stem-Cell Bond Goes on California's Ballot
NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, June 4, 2004
SAN FRANCISCO A proposal to provide $3 billion for
stem-cell research qualified for the November ballot after a
campaign by scientists and high-profile patient advocates such as moviemaker Jerry Zucker.
If passed, the measure would provide $295 million to researchers
each year for 10 years, far exceeding the $60 million awarded by
the federal government in 2002.
The program also would fund laboratory cloning projects intended
to create stem cells for medical use while specifically banning
funding of cloning programs designed to create babies.
Proponents have raised about $5.3 million and collected 1
million signatures for the bond proposition, certified
Wednesday by Secretary of State Kevin Shelley.
Human embryonic stem cells appear in the first days after
conception and help create tissues throughout the body. Scientists
hope to study them to develop treatments for ailments from diabetes
to paralysis.
Many social conservatives oppose the proposition because
days-old embryos are destroyed during stem-cell research, but an
opposition campaign has yet to file state paperwork.
Bond supporters include Zucker, who directed 1990's "Ghost,"
and Nobel laureates Paul Berg, J. Michael Bishop and David
Baltimore, as well as patient-advocacy groups, parents of sick
children and venture capitalists.
The measure was also endorsed Thursday by state Treasurer Phil
Angelides and Controller Steve Westly.
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