Pubdate: Fri, 19 Apr 2002 Source: Chilliwack Progress (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 The Chilliwack Progress Contact: http://www.theprogress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/562 Author: Robert Freeman Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) MARIJUANA BILL SENT TO 'NEVER-NEVER LAND' BY LIBERALS A private member's bill to decriminalize marijuana went up in smoke Wednesday, set alight by an amendment from the federal Liberal government. "Rather than deal with it, they just sent it off to Never-Never Land," complained Fraser Valley MP Chuck Strahl, who hosted a town hall meeting here in Chilliwack two months ago on the controversial issue. The government's use of parliamentary process to kill a private member's bill "really is outrageous," said Mr. Strahl. He added that Alliance MP Keith Martin, a B.C. doctor who authored the bill, was also outraged by the Liberal tactic, and may face parliamentary censure for touching a symbolic mace that resides in the House of Commons. New Democratic Party House Leader Bill Blaikie told reporters the Liberal tactic was "a sad day for parliamentary democracy." "Whenever the government doesn't want something to come to a vote, it can use its majority to overcome private members' business," he said. Mr. Martin's bill would have made possession of small amounts of marijuana a summary offence subject to tickets and fines but no criminal record. The amendment sends the bill to an existing special committee studying the non-medical use of drugs. Mr. Strahl said the Liberals' arrogance in power shows why the party is not favoured by voters in B.C. While cod fishermen on the east coast received billions of federal dollars when the fishery collapsed, B.C. loggers and forest-dependent communities are not getting anything from the Liberal government. The softwood lumber dispute didn't even register on the Liberal radar screen until after the effects were felt outside of B.C. and "then everybody hit the panic button," he said. "Then it's a national crisis." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh