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New initiative sparks end-of-life debate
by Brad Shannon, The Olympian, 1/14/2008

Former Gov. Booth Gardner and allies filed an initiative Wednesday that would let doctors prescribe lethal medications for terminally ill patients to help end their lives and suffering.

Washington voters rejected a broader assisted-suicide initiative in 1991, but Gardner said the new proposal is more tightly written, mirroring Oregon's, which he described as having a good track record.

Gardner said Jack Kevorkian no longer casts a shadow over "Death with Dignity" campaigns, as he did in 1991.

"The initiative is a compassionate, reasonable measure," said Gardner, who called it "my last campaign."

Gardner has Parkinson's disease, which has slowed his speech. He would not be eligible to use the powers in the measure because he is not terminally ill.

He was joined by a retired Methodist minister, a doctor and two women who spoke of their own relatives' deaths — one who was assisted by Oregon's law and one who wasn't.

The forces behind the "It's My Decision" campaign face opposition, including from Gardner's son, Doug. The son said he does not intend to be a formal part of the campaign against the initiative but has religious objections to the measure.

The leader of the Coalition Against Assisted Suicide is Democratic Sen. Margarita Prentice of Renton, a retired nurse. The coalition includes doctors, hospice workers and disability activists. They say the measure would provide a subtle encouragement for suicide and could put pressure on disabled people and others to end their lives prematurely.

Both sides were packed into the lobby of the Secretary of State's Office, where Death with Dignity backers filed their petition. The backers need 225,000 valid voter signatures by July 4 to qualify for the November ballot; they say they have 1,000 volunteers but won't rule out paid help if needed.

Two activists in wheelchairs, Duane French of Lacey and Joelle Brouner of Olympia, spoke against the law in a news conference that followed the one featuring Gardner.

French and Brouner said the law could create a coercion for some disabled people who are faced with difficulty getting palliative, or non-curative, care. French said some could be pressured by family or by economic forces into taking their lives.

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