Pubdate: Sun, 06 Mar 2005 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2005 Calgary Herald Contact: http://www.canada.com/calgary/calgaryherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Allan Woods, CanWest News Service Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) POT PROPOSALS STOPPED SHORT AT CONVENTION Shootings Used To Justify Stiffer Grow Op Penalties The Liberal party shot down two controversial policies on marijuana reforms Saturday in favour of a resolution to consider decriminalizing prostitution, something that was considered a longshot heading into the party's policy convention. An emotionally charged debate over federal marijuana laws, set against a backdrop of four dead Mounties, was contained within a raucous committee room and never made it to the party's main convention floor. In debates over separate initiatives to increase penalties for those who run marijuana grow operations and to legalize the drug, the party hashed out issues that had hung over the convention all weekend. "Today, frankly, I have to tell you that I enjoyed the esthetics of the debate," said Justice Minister Irwin Cotler of the marijuana resolutions, which pitted Young Liberals, the youth wing of the party, against older Liberals. "If this will help improve and increase understanding in the public at large and further the debate, then it's all for the good." At a policy workshop on justice issues, a packed room of Liberal delegates voted in favour of both marijuana resolutions, but decided it was more important to push Canada's governing party to reconsider legislation in order to keep prostitutes out of harm's way. Delegates cast 181 votes for sex-workers rights; 166 for stiffer grow-op penalties; and 133 in favour of legalizing marijuana. The contentious pot debate was immediately framed in the tragedy of four RCMP officers gunned down Thursday during a raid on an Alberta farm that was found to contain a small grow operation. "We knew that something drastic was going to happen and we just didn't know when," B.C. delegate Ginny Hasselfield said as she proposed the grow op sentencing resolution. Her assertion drew loud groans from the back of the packed room. "Do we want a U.S. war-on-drugs approach to this problem? Or will we sit down and consider a Liberal solution?" responded one delegate to loud cheers. The mandatory sentence resolution was adopted, nonetheless. A review of legislation outlawing the solicitation of prostitutes was ultimately among those adopted to official Liberal Party policy. Young Liberals had campaigned hard in favour of the policy, but had not expected such success heading into the convention. Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Anne McLellan appeared to breathe a sigh of relief that the controversial marijuana proposals would not become official Liberal policy. A Cannabis Reform Bill has been tabled in the House of Commons and is under review. It is almost certain to dominate question period when the Commons resumes sitting this week. "We take input from many sources, including our party and what I am also saying is that the policy of this government is clear. We do not support legalization. And that is the government policy," said McLellan, whose portfolio oversees the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. "Young Liberals come and one would hope that they do their homework and it is an informed and respectful debate, but I would be amazed if Young Liberals came to a convention like this and don't push the envelope." Legalization advocate Dan Arnold, a Young Liberal from Alberta, said he has never smoked the drug but believes the government stands to collect as much as $3 billion in taxes from the legalization of marijuana. Despite his defence of the emotionally charged resolution, he suggested it was better for the party to avoid the continued controversy that would have come from the further discussion of marijuana reforms. "It's probably a good thing," he admitted. "You always want to avoid controversial resolutions." Marc Boris St-Maurice, who defected from the Marijuana party to the Liberal party in anticipation of the cannabis debate, accused Grits for and against drug reform of using the shooting deaths of four RCMP officers in northern Alberta on Thursday to politicize the debate, something he has tried to back away from. "I feel it is a shame that some people tried to play politics with that, but I'm suspecting that will always happen," he said. He was disappointed his cause was defeated by the sex-worker issue. "I think . . . the sex-trade worker resolution draws from the same sort of activist base as the legalize marijuana resolution," he said. "It has driven a wedge and I think had that issue not been there there would have been larger support for the legalization resolutions." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth