Pubdate: Mon, 26 May 2003 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 The London Free Press a division of Sun Media Corporation. Contact: http://www.fyilondon.com/londonfreepress/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Jim Brown, Canadian Press LIBERALS FINALLY READY TO LIGHTEN UP ON POT Possession of 15 grams of marijuana or less will result in only a fine. OTTAWA -- The Liberal government, after months of hesitation, is finally ready to bring in legislation ensuring Canadians will no longer face jail time and criminal records for simple possession of marijuana. As Justice Minister Martin Cauchon prepares to table the bill in the House of Commons tomorrow, federal spin doctors are already at work trying to reassure law-and-order advocates who doubt the wisdom of the move. Lightening up on users isn't the same as making pot legal, they emphasize. Nor does it mean Ottawa is going soft on growers and traffickers, who will continue to face stiff penalties. Government strategists have even wiped the word decriminalization from their vocabulary -- largely because they fear most people don't understand what it means. "It was a mistake to start off talking about decriminalization," said one Liberal insider. "We should have been talking about sentencing reform." Under the legislation it will still be against the law to possess marijuana, even for personal use. But possession of 15 grams or less -- about 15 to 20 joints, depending on how they're rolled -- will be a minor offence punishable by a fine. The financial hurt could range from as little as $100 to around $400, depending on the amount of weed, whether it's a first offence or repeat offence, and other aggravating or mitigating factors. Prime Minister Jean Chretien has likened it to getting a traffic ticket and joked at a party fundraising dinner the offence would be "losing your senses" rather than exceeding the speed limit. Chretien has made it clear growers and traffickers can expect tougher sentences. The maximum prison term for growers could double to 14 years. Trafficking in anything over three kilograms now carries a maximum sentence of life, but that sentence is rarely, if ever, imposed. There will also be a revitalized enforcement effort, to be announced tomorrow by Solicitor General Wayne Easter. Insiders say the plan will include new funding for the RCMP and police forces across the country. Also to be unveiled tomorrow is a wider anti-drug strategy, co-ordinated by Health Minister Anne McLellan. She is expected to outline federal plans for enhanced education, research and treatment programs. Alan Young, a professor at Osgoode Hall law school in Toronto who has campaigned for reform of pot laws, questions the strategy. "They've come up with a very confused scheme which creates the appearance of movement but really is business as usual," said Young. "All that's really being achieved is depenalization, which simply means the removal of incarceration for under 15 grams." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth