The group campaigning for the legalization of recreational marijuana in Michigan raised significantly more money in the second quarter of the year than its opposition -- but has less cash in the bank heading into August.

Both sides have yet to kick in serious cash to the campaign with three months to go to the election.

The Coalition to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol raised $113,789 from April to July, according to campaign finance records. The group is behind the legalization ballot question that voters will decide Nov. 6.

That's compared to the $1,625 the opposition campaign Healthy and Productive Michigan raised in the same time period, records show.

Neither campaign has much cash in the bank heading into August.

The pro-legalization campaign has $21,039 in the bank, and the anti-legalization campaign has $67,551 in the bank, records show.

The Coalition to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol spent $110,575 in total in the last quarter. About $65,000 of that went to consultants, which by far was its biggest expense. It also spent $13,000 on fundraising, $5,000 on research and $2,500 on field organizers.

The Marijuana Policy Project has contributed significantly to the legalization campaign in Michigan, donating $444,205 in total in the election cycle.

In the past quarter, donations to the campaign have also come in from people in Iowa, Alabama, California, Tennessee, Ohio, Texas, Illinois, New York, Alaska, Delaware, Virginia, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Indiana, Minnesota, Vermont, Colorado and Washington.

The opposition group -- Healthy and Productive Michigan -- has mostly been funded by a national organization, SAM (Smart Approaches to Marijuana) Action in the election cycle. So far this election cycle, the group has given Healthy and Productive Michigan $275,000 -- but didn't kick in any funds in the last quarter.

Of the $1,650 the group raised in the past quarter, $1,000 of it came from Mark Murray, the president of Meijer.

The opposition group spent $149,359 in the past quarter. They spent $66,083 on consultants, $40,000 on digital ads, $12,650 on lobbying, $11,838 on legal fees and $5,000 on polling.