1. The ballot measure calls for first-time drug offenders and parolees found using drugs to be provided treatment instead of being sent to prison. 2. The measure calls for the tobacco revenue to be used to help states defray Medicaid costs related to smoking and fund other health and anti-smoking programs. 3. The measure calls for the U.S. Customs Service to bar any products made outside the U.S. using indentured children or children sold or bartered into forced labor. 4. The measure calls for a ban on soft-money contributions, the unregulated form of donations that corporations, unions and individuals make to political parties. 5. The measure calls for the U.S. Customs Service to investigate and then bar any products made outside the U.S. using indentured children or children sold into slavery. 6. The measure calls on the Mexican government to allow more U.S. anti-drug agents to work in the country and to carry firearms. 7. Some critics, including First Deputy Prime Minister Anatoly Chubais, have complained that the much-amended, compromise measure calls for too much red tape. 8. The measures call for reducing trade tariffs, making it easier for businessmen to get visas, improving air and sea links and establishing joint cultural and science institutes. 9. The measure calls on UN Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali to make recommendations on strengthening the safe zones in Bosnia. 10. The measure calls on governments to cooperate in stopping illegal trade in tigers, whose parts are used in a variety of Asian medicinal remedies. |