Pubdate: Sat, 09 Jun 2001 Source: Southland Times (New Zealand) Copyright: 2001, Southland Times Company Ltd. Contact: http://www.the-times.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1041 Author: Lyn Cross TANCZOS VISITS CITY TO DISCUSS CANNABIS LAW Cannabis law reform was designed to let the community take back control of the drug, Green Party MP Nandor Tanczos said in Invercargill. Under existing legislation, control was in the hands of anyone prepared to break the law, he said. Mr Tanczos was in the city this week to discuss cannabis legislation and the Clean Slate Bill. He spoke at a public meeting at the Southern Institute of Technology on Thursday night and at the Sunrise Rotary Club yesterday. It seemed clear people had concerns about both cannabis law reform and the Clean Slate Bill but reaction at the meetings had been positive, Mr Tanczos said. Cannabis legislation was not about adults using the drug in the privacy of their own homes, he said. "It's about how do we reduce cannabis abuse in young people and drug abuse generally." New Zealand had the highest rate of cannabis use in the world per population and the situation was getting worse, he said. The community needed to take control. The answer was in better education and rehabilitation services. "We need to take the bottom out of the illegal market." The cannabis market needed to be regulated by taxing it. Licensing people to grow and sell cannabis, and a similar age limit on use to tobacco and alcohol would also help, he said. This would separate cannabis from hard drugs such as heroin and cocaine, Mr Tanczos said. The Clean Slate Bill was about allowing a person with a minor conviction to have it wiped after a period of years of non-offending. The bill would not in reality clean the slate but it would restrict access to the information. "It would let people move on with their lives," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew