Pubdate: Fri, 06 Sep 2002 Source: Ubyssey (CN BC Edu) Contact: http://www.ubyssey.bc.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/706 Fax: (604) 822-9279 "LEGALISE, MAN!": SENATE On Wednesday, a Canadian Senate committee issued a report recommending the legalisation of marijuana. The Ubyssey supports this idea, and for many more reasons than the ones you are probably sniggering over right now. Decriminalisation just makes good sense. In fact, it makes such good sense that even the Senate-arguably the least ambitious of Canada's political organs-is taking notice. The Senate document, over the course of a colossal 600 pages, winds its way through scientific fact-marijuana is far less harmful than alcohol or cigarettes-and into matters of policy, suggesting that cannabis use among Canadians would be better treated as a public health issue, not a criminal matter. Given the minimal health risks of marijuana use, the committee is calling for the substance to be controlled by regulations similar to those that govern alcohol. "Prohibition is a cop-out," said Pierre Claude Nolan, the chair of the nine-senator committee. The report brings the findings of two years of research and 234 interviews to bear on the issue, and concludes that the purchase and use of marijuana should be made legal for those aged 16 and over. After 79 years of marijuana prohibition in Canada, this is groundbreaking, not in terms of its content-the Canadian Medical Association made similar recommendations a year ago-but in terms of its source: the traditionally conversative Senate. The committee, drawn from a group whose thought patterns often seem to be in a decades-old holding pattern, has added a great deal of weight to the seemingly inevitable movement in Canada toward legalising marijuana. This report is just the latest of many government voices speaking in favour of liberalising marijuiana law; it joins a chorus that has been building since 1973, when a federal commission called on courts to stop pursuing charges for marijuana possession. Even Joe Clark, of all people, has spoken in favour of relaxing marijuana law. Of course, not everybody agrees with our surprisingly progressive Senate. The Canadian Police Association, for example, says that drug dealers would be pleased if the Senate recommendations come into effect. More certainly, the country's police forces would be embarrassed by the recommendation to grant amnesty to the 600,000 Canadians who have a criminal record for of marijuana possession. 25,000 new possession charges are laid in Canada every year. Multiply that by the resources used by the police and courts toward the clearly impossible goal of abolishing marijuana use, and you've got what we at the Ubyssey like to call a tragic waste of resources. An estimated one billion dollars is spent annually on enforcing marijuana prohibition in Canada, and we know we're not alone in thinking that there just might me more worthwhile uses for this money. Healthcare or education, anyone? If the report's recommendations were followed, the government would actually be able to make money from marijuana; commercial sales by licensed vendors would be taxed in much the same way as alcohol and tobacco sales. Bringing marijuana sales above-ground would take control of the substance's distribution, and take it away from organised crime, allowing safety standards to be enforced. The Canadian Medical Association estimates that 1.5 million Canadians use marijuana recreationally; if marijuana were decriminalised these millions of people would no longer be criminals, as they (we) currently are, by legal definition. The day after the Senate report was released, Federal Justice Minister Martin Cauchon described current marijuana legislation as "disconnected with Canadian reality." He won't consider changing the law, though, until the release of a House of Commons report on illicit drugs. Due to be released in November, this report may be the next step toward marijuana legalisation. The Senate doesn't show real leadership very often-we hope that the House is listening. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh