Pubdate: Fri, 13 Jun 2003 Source: Folio (CN AB Edu) Copyright: 2003 University of Alberta Contact: http://www.ualberta.ca/FOLIO/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2673 Author: Richard Cairney UP IN SMOKE: IT'S HARD TO FIND ANYONE WHO'S GIDDY ABOUT PROPOSED POT LAW Pot Proponents Say It Doesn't Go Far Enough; Others Say It's Too, Uh, Liberal Late last month, after years of speculation, the federal government introduced legislation that would fundamentally change the way marijuana is regarded socially and in our courts. The proposed new law takes an unusual approach to meet its goals of educating the public about the perils of drugs and discouraging drug use: it decriminalizes possession of marijuana in amounts between 15 and 30 grams and vows to step up convictions and introduce stiffer penalties for those convicted of more serious drug-related offences than mere possession (full details are available online at: http://canada.justice.gc.ca/en/news/ ). Folio asked several members of the campus community for their thoughts on the controversial proposal: Dr. David Cook, director, Division of Studies in Medical Education, Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences "Both sides of this debate seem to ignore those facts that support the opposite view. For example, the fact that marijuana is 'natural' is entirely irrelevant - so is deadly nightshade, or an angry grizzly bear! No drug is completely safe, and cannabis is no exception; inhaling the smoke can produce lung damage, and the drug does impair learning, something that is of great concern when used by teenagers, whose marijuana consumption may impair their ability to develop effective thought processes at a time when learning is natural and easy. "The issue of cannabis and driving is much more complicated than either side seems willing to admit. Dependence certainly can occur, but the majority of users are not cannabis dependent. Whether it is a 'gateway drug' is hotly debated in the scientific literature, but since the dealers in cannabis can usually provide a source of other illicit drugs, the possibility that legislation actually promotes its role as a gateway drug cannot be ignored. "The issue of the potency of marijuana is a further source of contention. The content of THC has increased significantly, although not to the extent often claimed. The impact of this on the incidence of cannabis dependence is much less certain. It has even been claimed that, since cannabis users smoke to their desired degree of intoxication, a more potent form will involve smoking less of the drug and thus reduce the tar intake that is responsible for lung damage. "Overall, the question is not about the safety of the drug, but whether making possession of cannabis a criminal offence is in the best interests of society. Keeping it in the criminal code has not proved to be an effective deterrent, has wasted the time and energy of the police and the courts, and is hard to justify on the basis of medical harm. No, the drug is not safe and people would be better not to use it, but decriminalization is a rational approach. Parenthetically, decriminalizing the cultivation of small amounts for personal use, would greatly reduce the profits of the drug dealers, reduce the possibility of the marijuana being contaminated with some more toxic agent, and make the users less likely to be exposed to other drugs - all desirable outcomes." Michael Cust, Philosophy and Political Science student (Cust served as communication director for the BC Marijuana Party in the summer of 2002 and is currently an advisor to the party. This summer he will be writing drug policy at the Cato Institute in Washington, DC.) "This proposed law will do nothing to curb the most pressing problems with marijuana, namely basement grow-ops (illegal marijuana growing operations) and the involvement of organized crime in the marijuana industry. In fact, it will make the latter problems worse. Why? The only reason marijuana is grown in basements and traded by organized crime syndicates is because it is illegal. By increasing the maximum penalty on growing (marijuana) from seven years to 14, and by maintaining the current penalty for trafficking at life imprisonment, the government will further entrench criminal elements by making the risks of growing and selling pot much greater and therefore more appealing only to the most violent criminal elements. If pot were legal, it would be grown in greenhouses by respectable businesses - a much more economical set-up than houses. There is a reason Al-Qaeda doesn't hold shares in Budweiser - they can't compete in a legal setting. "This bill is also worse for pot smokers too. Right now if someone is caught with a small amount of marijuana on campus, Campus 5-0 lets them go. Under the new bill, they could face a fine somewhere in the range of $100-$400. Although this bill is better for pot smokers in a de jure sense, it is worse for them in a de facto sense." ~~~ Dr. Bryan Hogeveen, Criminology, Department of Sociology, University of Alberta "In the last 10, 15, maybe even 20 years, the idea that marijuana should be regulated has come under intense scrutiny from different groups, from different individuals, from the media. For example, I'm thinking of the (pro-marijuana) documentary Grass. So you've got these films and these celebrities recommending perhaps we should not be regulating marijuana. "What happens then? You get a very permissive atmosphere where marijuana is constructed in a very similar way as alcohol and tobacco: it's a drug, but is it less harmful for us? "The way I look at it is the construction of the problem, the issue, and more specifically what's happened in the last three-five years is that what we've seen, and police officers will back me up on this, is that (law enforcement) is less likely to spend a lot of time and money policing marijuana legislation and laws. With the impending change in legislation, from what I've heard, why would you bust somebody for a small quantity of marijuana when they come before the judge who says, "Listen, there's going to be a deregulation of this drug in the next little while anyway, why should I put this individual in jail, why should I sentence this individual to probation?' "It then creates the perception that policing marijuana becomes a waste of police resources. If we are not policing marijuana legislation it leads to a questioning of the law around marijuana. If I say to you, 'Listen, if you get caught with some marijuana, you're not going to get punished very strictly anyway, so what's the big deal?' . the institution of law around marijuana becomes profane." Mark Cherrington, Youth Court Worker for the Youth Criminal Defense Office, and producer of CJSR's Youth Menace, the world's only child welfare and young offender radio show "I think the (existing) laws need to be changed and there needs to be a means of getting rid of the criminal aspect of marijuana. I think we've criminalized a whole generation of young people and we've put up barriers from allowing them to participate in certain programs, such as nursing or educational programs, because of a criminal record. . Over the years we've really done a disservice to many young people by burdening them with a criminal record for something that I wouldn't say is fairly minor, but something that isn't as significant as what a criminal record is supposed to mean. "The concern is that the government wants to please everybody and they've just got themselves stuck in the middle. I think they should've gone farther and legalized marijuana because the fact remains that we're going to see an increased usage among youth because of the criminal aspect disappearing. "What I think we've inadvertently done is provided catalyst to expose a lot more youth to a very dangerous criminal element. From that we might get young people involved in very serious drug debts, buying on margin, involved in subsidizing free pot for driving it around, thinking that it's not illegal to carry quantities like that, and maybe getting a fine. Some upper-middle-class kid in a nice neighbourhood gets a $200 fine, and instead of letting his parents know is going to rat out the drug dealer. "What you had in the past was a sort of set-up system where drug dealers were exposed to a very low percentage of the youth population. And I think when we decriminalize it, initially we're going to have a spiked increase in the number of youth experimenting with marijuana, and I think their contact with this organized criminal element is a recipe for disaster." ~~~ Bill Mowbray, Head of the University of Alberta Campus Security Service "This is an issue that is borne out of necessity to help or assist our struggling judicial system. Court cases in every province view minor possession of marijuana in a minor way and fines reflect that - $100 fines don't normally warrant criminal charges. I am sure that is the necessity for our struggling courts. But we never should view marijuana possession in those strict terms we must look at how it reacts in wider scope such as impaired driving, driving under the influence of alcohol and marijuana and how, if it is decriminalized, that might increase the possibility of people using both. In my 29 years with the Edmonton Police Service, and for four years as head of the major crimes division, I came to realize that drugs are the root of all evil when it comes to crime. If you look at a crime, from shoplifting to breaking into people's homes to the gang murders, you can trace it back to drugs. "Maybe the answer is not decriminalization, but a revamping of the court system to bring it into line with its day-to-day needs. Maybe what we are doing instead is trying to fix our court problems by minimizing the problems we face in society." - --- MAP posted-by: Alex