Pubdate: Thu, 31 Jan 2002 Source: Hour Magazine (CN QU) Copyright: 2002, Communications Voir Inc. Contact: http://www.hour.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/971 Author: Charlie McKenzie Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada) WAITING FOR YOUR SHARE OF THE GOVERNMENT'S 256 KILOS OF LEGAL POT? Don't Hold Your Breath It was meant to be a day of reckoning for Boris St-Maurice. Instead, Montreal's best-known marijuana advocate is yet again at the mercy of the courts, at least until the end of March. St-Maurice, leader of the Marijuana Party, and Alex N=C8ron, head of BlocPot, were first busted Feb 10, 2000, for distributing medical marijuana. Judge Gilles Cadieux was supposed to render a decision in their case on Jan 29, but has taken more time to study the case. The delay is but another example of the country's slow (stoned?) wheels of justice. "It's nerve-racking," commented St-Maurice on their ordeal. "Two years later, Alex and I are still at the mercy of Judge Cadieux. But on the bright side, this delay means the compassion clubs can stay open, at least till Ottawa gets its act together." Despite all the talk of legalization, St-Maurice's case highlights a continuing problem: apparently no one knows what a sick or dying person has to do to get a legal joint in this country. The government's medical marijuana program seems stalled between shuffling cabinet ministers and bureaucrats. "The real shame," St-Maurice says, "are reports that Health Canada is looking to delay their medical marijuana distribution yet another year." Possibly true. Health Canada is currently sitting on 250 kilos of primo bud with 10 per cent tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) content, direct from their $5 grow-op at the bottom of a Manitoba mineshaft, which they're seemingly in no hurry to deliver. Boris St-Maurice expressed concern that with former Justice Minister Anne McClellan in charge, Allan Rock's medical marijuana pipe dream may soon go the way of the roach clip. Not so, asserts Health Canada spokesperson Andrew Swift: "A change of minister would have absolutely no impact on the marijuana program." Distribution delays are necessary, he explained, "because it's currently being tested to make sure that it is a safe, reliable strain of homogenized marijuana, suitable for medical use." So, how long will that take? "I couldn't say," he said. "Months, maybe more. I wouldn't put a deadline on it." Though Health Canada used seeds seized from drug dealers, bikers and other assorted lowlifes, they didn't test their quality. Health Canada, said Swift, only tests the seeds to make sure that they are indeed marijuana. OOO Bad seeds or not, Brent Zettl stands proudly by his crop. Zettl is the president of Prairie Plant Systems, which has the $5-million Health Canada contract to grow legal weed. Though Health Canada wanted a concentration of 5 per cent THC, Zettl said his pot has twice that. "It's anything but weak," Zettl recently boasted. "When the [sanctioned medical users] get this stuff," he said, "they'll see it really works. It's good stuff." That remains to be seen, but if Health Canada is seriously seeking ways to legitimately distribute their crop, they don't have far to look. "The guidelines used by the compassion clubs in Montreal and Vancouver offer the best means," said St-Maurice. "We proved that in court: government could incorporate these clubs into the national health plan easily. It's safe, fair, and it works." Presently, at least one private members' bill to decriminalize marijuana is before parliament, as well as one parliamentary committee, one senate committee, and a handful of jurists at various levels across Canada, all studying the issue of illicit drugs - marijuana in particular. There is also a trio of politically charged marijuana cases heading for the Supreme Court later this year that could conceivably overturn all the marijuana laws and thus make the whole issue moot, but no one - least of all St-Maurice - is holding their breath. Given the bureaucracy involved, meaningful marijuana reform may take another year, if not more. The debate has become so complex, you almost need a degree to keep abreast. Enter Brian Taylor, outspoken former mayor of Grand Forks, British Columbia, and former leader of the BC Marijuana Party. Taylor now teaches one of the most popular courses at nearby Selkirk College, appropriately called Medical Marijuana 101. "Anyone who is considering applying for a Section 56 exemption to use marijuana for medical purposes or any 'designated grower' who may consider growing for a medical patient should take time for this course," says the school calendar. "Anybody can sign up for it," says Taylor. "The regulations are very difficult to understand: we want to take the mystery out of the rules and of growing marijuana. We want to encourage people to grow their own and work within current regulations." As well as covering Health Canada regulations, Medical Marijuana 101 deals with basic indoor and outdoor growing techniques. "We also teach them what a bud looks like," said Taylor, "how to trim it, what you want to smoke or not smoke." The RCMP has been invited to attend his classes, but have so far failed to show. "That's the marijuana issue in a nutshell," quipped St-Maurice. "The authorities have no class." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh