Pubdate: Wed, 28 May 2003 Source: Medicine Hat News (CN AB) Copyright: 2003 Alberta Newspaper Group, Inc. Contact: http://www.medicinehatnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1833 Author: Jim Brown POT LAWS TABLED Feds Look to Lighten Penalties for Pot Users, Get Tough on Growers The Liberal government moved Tuesday to eliminate criminal penalties for simple possession of marijuana, drawing praise from lawyers, cautious support from doctors and brickbats from police, opposition MPs and some of its own backbenchers. Under legislation introduced by Justice Minister Martin Cauchon, possession of up to 15 grams of pot - enough to roll about 15 or 20 joints - would be a minor offence that carries no criminal record. Violators would be ticketed and ordered to pay fines ranging from $100 to $250 for youths and from $150 to $400 for adults. People caught with between 15 and 30 grams could get the same treatment if they're lucky. But they could also, at the discretion of police, be charged in criminal court and face up to six months in jail. While the bill would ease up on small-time users, there would be no respite for illicit growers and dealers. The maximum sentence for grow operations would be 14 years in prison, up from the current seven, with the length of term increasing in proportion to the amount grown. The penalty for trafficking would remain unchanged - a maximum life sentence, although in practice the toughest terms handed out in recent years have been about 20 years for major dealers. Ottawa also plans to set aside an additional $245 million over the next five years to beef up law enforcement efforts and to fund education, information, research and treatment programs aimed at curbing drug use. Cauchon, who hopes to push his bill through Parliament by the end of the year, acknowledged the government is sending a double-edged message. Casual pot smokers will no longer face the threat of jail and young people won't automatically be saddled with criminal records that haunt them for life -- one of the government's chief reasons for moving ahead with the changes. But toking up will still be against the law. "I want to be clear from the beginning," said Cauchon. "We are not legalizing marijuana and have no plans to do so. What we are changing is the way we prosecute certain offences." Health Minister Anne McLellan echoed that view as she outlined the $245-million education and enforcement plan that accompanied the new legislation. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake