KICKING INTO SIGNATURE-GATHERING GEAR — Ending MCAS as a high school graduation requirement, legalizing psychedelics, bringing back rent control, classifying app-based drivers as non-employees and letting those drivers unionize are among the 31 questions that got the green light from the attorney general to continue down the path toward the 2024 ballot. That was the easy part. Proponents of each of these measures now face logistical, legal and financial challenges in actually getting their questions before voters next year. First is the 11-week sprint to collect the nearly 75,000 signatures that need to be filed with local officials in November and the secretary of state in December. Then the Legislature gets the chance to weigh in. If lawmakers don’t, proponents have to gather even more signatures to get on the ballot. They also, in some cases, will have to clear legal hurdles. Opposition groups have already pledged to challenge the rent control and driver-classification questions in court. Massachusetts Is Not For Sale, a coalition of unions and worker groups, said it is again “committed to challenging” the classification initiative (nine versions of which were approved on Wednesday). And two groups — the conservative Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance and, per the Boston Globe, the commercial real estate industry group NAIOP Massachusetts — say they plan to appeal the certification of the local-option rent-control question put forward by state Rep. Mike Connolly. Opposition to Connolly's effort is also coming from rent-control advocates. Homes for All Massachusetts, a housing justice group, is imploring Connolly to “drop his effort” — telling the Globe that his “unilateral decision" to pursue a ballot question "against the wishes of movement leaders” will “detract” from legislative efforts to overturn the decades-old ban. Then there’s the cost. Ballot campaigns can amount to multimillion-dollar ventures — even when they fail. Proponents of ranked-choice voting raised $10 million to try and convince voters to approve a new election system in 2020. Uber, Lyft, Instacart and DoorDash contributed nearly $44 million to last year’s effort to classify app-based drivers as independent contractors before it was struck down by the SJC. Opponents raised about $1.6 million. The second go-round could be even more expensive. Real-estate industry leaders have said they could spend as much as $30 million fighting the return of rent control, while an out-of-state housing advocacy group has already donated $50,000 to help get the question on the ballot. "We understand that this is facing powerful, intense opposition," Connolly told reporters on Beacon Hill. But, he said, if voters are "given the opportunity to lift the statewide ban on rent control, we believe they will.” Representatives for other ballot committees wouldn’t say when asked by Playbook how much they’d be willing to spend to get their petitions before voters next fall. Max Page, the president of the Massachusetts Teachers Association that’s pushing the ballot question to replace the MCAS graduation requirement, said only that the union “is willing to invest the resources need[ed] to win.” Opponents were equally vague. Ed Lamont, the executive director of the Massachusetts Business Alliance for Education, said his group and its allies are “prepared to invest in ensuring that the public is fully informed about what the consequences would be” of eliminating the MCAS requirement. GOOD THURSDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Attorney General Andrea Campbell still hasn’t said whether Auditor Diana DiZoglio can sue the Legislature into complying with her audit of its practices and procedures. But she did certify the ballot question that would codify the auditor’s authority to conduct such reviews. DiZoglio is now calling on “everyone who’s interested in helping to increase transparency, accountability and accessibility in the Legislature” to help gather signatures. Dive deeper into which ballot questions were certified and rejected with CommonWealth Magazine’s Jennifer Smith and GBH's Katie Lannan and Elena Eberwein . TODAY — Gov. Maura Healey and Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll announce the first round of Massachusetts Farm Resiliency Fund checks at 12:30 p.m. at Hollis Hills Farm in Fitchburg. Driscoll attends a ribbon-cutting ceremony at 10:30 a.m. in Burlington and the Trustees of Reservations One Waterfront Gala at 7 p.m. in Boston. Rep. Richard Neal announces federal funding for the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts at 1 p.m. in North Adams. Tips? Scoops? Are you running for mayor or city council? Put us on your press list: lkashinsky@politico.com and kgarrity@politico.com .
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