Here Is How a Ballot Idea Became State Law and What Happened Along the Way
Curator’s Notes: Proposition 36 in California, addressing fentanyl-related issues, originated from a focused initiative spearheaded by Upfront Inc. through FentanylSolution.org. This organization funded the initial drafting of the ballot language, which specifically addressed fentanyl trafficking and overdoses. While Proposition 36 appeared as a robust law after voter approval, it incorporated nearly identical language from the original initiative, reflecting a strategic blend of accountability and treatment options for addiction. As the campaign evolved, retail theft provisions were added, expanding its financial backing. This process illustrates how advocacy efforts can impact legislation and highlights the importance of transparency in the policy-making journey. This essay was written by Adam Regiaba, Founder & CEO of Upfront Inc.
How fentanyl language launched and funded by Upfront Inc. quietly became part of one of California’s most widely approved ballot measures.
If you follow California politics, Proposition 36 may have felt like it arrived fully formed , a tough, voter-approved response to fentanyl deaths and retail theft that moved quickly from proposal to law. But it didn’t start that way.
Long before Proposition 36 became a statewide campaign, the fentanyl language at the heart of the measure already existed. It was drafted, funded, and formally introduced through an advocacy effort called FentanylSolution.org — an initiative launched and primarily funded by Upfront Inc. (www.upfrontinc.com).
Upfront wasn’t a symbolic supporter. It was the driving force behind the early work: underwriting the legal drafting, polling, filing process, and public presentation of a ballot measure focused narrowly on fentanyl trafficking and overdose accountability.
That original filing is public record —and it’s captured on video.
Official ballot filing video (original fentanyl-only submission)
This video documents the formal filing of the original ballot measure developed through FentanylSolution.org and funded by Upfront Inc. It is this filing — and this language — that later reappeared inside Proposition 36, after additional provisions were added to broaden financial backing and secure the signature funding necessary to qualify the measure for the ballot.
The language presented in that filing was not abstract or aspirational. It was specific, deliberate, and written to address one urgent issue: the fentanyl crisis and the people profiting from it.
Where the Language Came From
This matters, so let’s be clear.
The fentanyl provisions that later appeared in Proposition 36 came directly from the work funded and initiated by Upfront Inc. through FentanylSolution.org. The language was developed internally during that effort and then delivered for formal filing by Janice Celeste Robinson, who served as the public-facing filer.
If you compare the original filing with the final text of Proposition 36, the fentanyl language is nearly verbatim , same structure, same warnings, same legal framing. That didn’t happen by coincidence.
It’s also important to understand what that original fentanyl language actually did. By design, it reopened the door to drug courts — restoring a structure where individuals struggling with addiction could be diverted into court-supervised treatment, while dealers and repeat offenders faced real accountability. That balance — treatment for users, consequences for traffickers — was central to the FentanylSolution.org filing and reflected a deliberate return to drug courts as a functional tool, not a slogan.
A Clarifying Note on the 2024 Measure
The version of Proposition 36 that voters approved in 2024 — by an overwhelming margin approaching 80 percent — contains fentanyl language that is identical to the language originally filed through FentanylSolution.org.
That filing did not emerge from a broad political coalition. Upfront Inc. launched FentanylSolution.org and was its primary — and for a substantial period, its only — financial backer, funding the drafting, polling, and filing work that produced the original fentanyl provisions.
Those provisions later reappeared, unchanged in substance, inside Proposition 36.
What most voters don’t know is not what the law says, but where that language began, who paid to put it into the system, and how it ultimately traveled from a narrowly focused fentanyl initiative into a statewide ballot measure backed by a much larger coalition.
The 50-Yard Line Moment
Here’s where the story turns. Fentanyl-only ballot initiatives face a hard reality in California: qualifying for the ballot requires hundreds of thousands of signatures, and signature gathering routinely costs tens of millions of dollars.
Upfront Inc. and FentanylSolution.org did the hard early work — the drafting, the filing, the proof of concept. In football terms, they got the ball to the 50-yard line.
But getting it into the end zone requires a much larger coalition.
That’s when something changed. The Expansion of the Measure
When Proposition 36 ultimately emerged as a full statewide campaign, it still contained the fentanyl language but it also included repeat retail theft and shoplifting provisions.
Those additions dramatically altered the political and financial landscape.
Retail theft provisions directly affect large national chains — Home Depot, Lowe’s, CVS, Rite Aid, and others — companies with both the incentive and the capacity to fund large-scale signature drives.
Public campaign finance records later showed more than $20 million raised to qualify Proposition 36 for the ballot.
That level of funding doesn’t appear overnight.
The Open Question
So here’s the question that deserves to be asked — calmly, factually, without accusation:
Who picked up the initiative after the fentanyl language was filed and expanded it into Proposition 36 as voters ultimately saw it?
What we know:
• Upfront Inc. launched and was the major donor behind FentanylSolution.org
• Upfront-funded work produced the original fentanyl ballot language
• That language appears in Proposition 36 nearly word-for-word
• The original filing predates the Prop 36 campaign
• Additional provisions were added later, broadening the donor base
Why This Isn’t About Credit
This isn’t about naming winners or claiming ownership. It’s about process and transparency.
Ballot initiatives don’t just pass laws — they set precedents. When language originating from one advocacy effort is later absorbed into a broader, heavily funded political campaign, the public deserves to understand how that happened.
Especially when the issue is as serious as fentanyl deaths.
What Comes Next
If California wants better policy, it also needs clearer origin stories.
Tracing how Proposition 36 evolved — from an Upfront-backed fentanyl initiative into a broad criminal justice measure — isn’t about controversy. It’s about learning how ideas move through power, money, and politics.
And it’s about making sure the next public-health initiative doesn’t lose its clarity along the way.

Referenced organizations:
Upfront Inc — https://www.upfrontinc.com
FentanylSolution.org — https://www.fentanylsolution.org
Proposition 36, California Ballot Measures, Fentanyl Crisis, Drug Courts, Public Policy, Criminal Justice Reform, Civic Process, Policy Transparency
Keywords for this research: #Proposition36 #CaliforniaPolitics #BallotInitiatives #FentanylCrisis #DrugCourts #PublicPolicy #CivicProcess #Accountability #PolicyTransparency #UpfrontInc #FentanylSolution
How to Connect with Adam Regiaba
You can connect with Adam via his primary professional websites, such as Upfront Inc. (CEO & Chairman of the Board) and FentanylSolution.org (Founder & Main Donor). Adam also has a LinkedIn, Medium, and a new Substack profile.
Meet Adam Regiaba through this interview conducted by Dr Mehmet Yildiz, founder and chief editor of ILLUMINATION Publications on Medium, Substack, Patreon, and Digitalmehmet:



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