Pubdate: Thu, 17 Jun 2004 Source: here (Saint John, CN NK) Copyright: 2004, here publishing inc. Contact: http://www.heresj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2989 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada) NO TOKEN EFFORT Marijuana Party Candidate Believes He Can Make A Difference In Ottawa Jim Wood can still remember the first time he did jail time for trafficking in marijuana. It was 1991 and Wood was sentenced to six months in the provincial penitentiary. Today, more than a decade later, he still gets angry at the memory. "I'm not a bad person," Wood said recently. "To put a 21-year old in jail for 6-months and basically ruin his life.it is just ridiculous." Wood is the co-owner of the Cannabis Cafe on Canterbury Street. He's also the official candidate in Saint John for the Marijuana Party, the group of stoners who think Canada needs to lighten up on marijuana use. Ours is a socially progressive nation but few things spark debate like making pot legal. Wood, who is 35 and the youngest on the ballot, admits the party is focused on a single issue. But he thinks it's high time the government ended the prohibition on marijuana use and he makes a compelling case. Because Saint John is close to the U.S. border, the Port City would benefit from the flood of Yankee dollars and government coffers would get a lucrative source of revenue by taxing pot, just like it does cigarettes and alcohol. "We have a lot of American tourists just dying to come up here and try our good Canadian pot. Why not sell it and tax it?" he said. Wood's campaign comes shortly after his latest brush with the law. This spring, city police raided the Cannabis Cafe, roughly eight months after Jim and his wife Lynne made headlines by declaring they would provide over the counter pot to people needing it. At the time of the arrest they had about 150 regular clients and had been mentioned in an article published by Rolling Stone. More recently, city police raided a second office this month that the couple had quietly opened uptown. Police arrested Lynne and she was detained over night. Lynne Wood will appear in court June 29, one day after the federal election, to answer to charges arising from the arrests. "Right now, we are going through the court proceedings and we intend to win," Jim said. The Martin Liberals have pledged to decriminalize the possession of marijuana, but it's not a core issue in the campaign. The Marijuana Party isn't likely to win any seats nationally and locally Wood must run a campaign dominated by Conservative Bob McVicar and Liberal Paul Zed. When voters last went to the polls in 2000, Canadians gave the party 0.5 per cent of the national vote. Wood, who was running in the city at the time, earned 461 votes or about 1 per cent of the local vote. Pot remains an illegal drug in Canada. However, three years ago the federal government amended the Narcotic Control Regulations Act to allow for the possession of marijuana by people with a serious or terminal illness. In Canada there are 734 persons allowed to possess marijuana for medicinal purposes, including 11 in New Brunswick. There are also 542 persons allowed to grow pot for medicinal purposes, most of whom do so for their own use. But about 70 persons are designated growers for someone else. To Wood, this all adds up to a desire for the legalization of marijuana. Recognized locally and nationally for his fight to legalize marijuana, Woods is well positioned to capture a younger generation of angry voters who feel that the prohibition on marijuana use is wrong. To them, he offers a world of Dionysian indulgence. Most Canadians agree that it's time Canada changed its marijuana laws to possession as a crime punishable with a fine and few want the country's youth facing criminal charges for something as innocent as pot. His party is not likely to get very far with the voters, though, who don't feel strongly enough about their views to support a single-issue party. Nonetheless, he will court their support. "If somebody out there believes in marijuana either for their own medicinal or recreational reasons," Wood said, "just come out and vote for me. I'll make a big difference." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek