Vote Yes on I-1000 if you believe terminally ill people should have a choice about how much pain and suffering they must endure at the end of their lives. I-1000, the Death with Dignity initiative, takes the decision on end-of-life matters out of the hands of the government, placing it instead with patients, their families and their doctors. Under the proposal, mentally competent, terminally ill adults with six months or less to live to receive — under strict safeguards — a prescription for life-ending medication. I-1000 is modeled on a similar law in Oregon, where experts agree the result has been an improvement in care for dying patients.
Initiatives of this type are always challenging, and many progressives could oppose I-1000 for religious reasons. In fact, both sides invoke progressive moral values in this race. Progressive organizations tilt heavily towards supporting the initiative, though, based solely on the principle of where the decision should lie-- believing it belongs in the hands of patients, their families and their doctors. Vote YES on I-1000.