Pubdate: Fri, 01 Apr 2005 Source: Langley Advance (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.langleyadvance.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1248 Author: Bob Groeneveld Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjparty.htm (Canadian Marijuana Party) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?196 (Emery, Marc) TOWNHALL MEETING: PANEL BLASTS POT LAW The invited, then uninvited, leader of the B.C. Marijuana Party got an icy reception at MP Mark Warawa's townhall meeting to discuss marijuana and grow operations in Langley. There were few surprises at MP Mark Warawa's marijuana townhall forum on Wednesday night. Panelists and the majority of the 200-plus people who came to listen to them at Newlands Golf Club didn't want marijuana use decriminalized, and instead wanted tougher laws and harsher penalties for operators in the marijuana trade. And everybody wanted grow ops out of their neighbourhoods. The forum was divided into two sections. The first half of the evening was directed at Bill C-17, legislation proposed by the federal government to decriminalize personal marijuana use, while increasing penalties for grow operators. Panelists were: Dr. Darryl Plecas, a criminology instructor at University College of the Fraser Valley; Kerry Bennington, filling in for B.C. Solicitor General and Fort Langley-Aldergrove MLA Rich Coleman who was unable to attend; and Christine Palmer, an addiction counsellor at Langley Family Services. Each explained, through their areas of expertise, why they felt Bill C-17 is inadequate or inappropriate. Plecas termed it "defeatist legislation." He said it was "no deterrent, and no way to stop people from getting into drugs in the first place." During the ensuing question period, he was asked if Bill C-17's "personal use" marijuana limit should be reduced from 30 grams to five grams, or even two. His response was, "They should bring it down to zero. I think this is an absolutely stupid bill." Bennington reiterated Coleman's previous pronouncements that the provincial government is opposed to decriminalization. He was also concerned that the federal legislation could not work without a great cost to the provinces. Proposed tickets for marijuana possession offences will be disputed in provincial courts, he noted, and it appears the federal government will offload the cost of collecting fines, as well. Palmer covered some health concerns related to marijuana use, including its propensity to cause risky social behaviour including impaired driving, many of the same health hazards of smoking tobacco, and potential addiction for some users. Marc Emery, initially invited by Warawa to join the panel, and then refused a place at the table [Pot party's forum voice stifled, Mar. 29, Langley Advance News], showed up and attempted to make a case for legalization during the question period. The leader of the B.C. Marijuana Party, who plans to contest Coleman's local seat in the legislature in the May election, garnered jeers and boos by charging that the room was filled with hypocrisy. "Everybody here uses dangerous substances," he said, citing everything from poor diet, guns, and fast cars. During the second question period, after a new set of panelists discussed grow ops in Langley, Warawa ruled him out of order when he again raised legalization as a way of undercutting organized crime's hold on marijuana production. The MP maintained that Emery was still discussing Bill C-17, which was the topic of the first panel. Emery was shouted down by the audience as he continued to try to make the case that, if everyone was allowed to grow their own marijuana in their backyards, grow ops would become obsolete. But both police officers in the second panel discussion, Dave Fleugel of the local RCMP drug squad and organized crime investigator Brian Cantera, said the huge market for marijuana in the United States would continue to fuel the demand for grow ops. They also discussed the violence born of grow ops, as marijuana is exchanged for guns and harder drugs in the U.S., and make their way north of the border. With medical technology improving, Cantera said, murder statistics aren't rising - but attempted murders are increasing significantly. "We're saving their lives," he said. Plecas spoke of the victimization of children, who are turning up at hospitals with respiratory problems from pesticides and other grow op residuals. Entire families are found living in a kitchen, while the rest of the house has been converted for marijuana production, he said. Further to Township Assistant Fire Chief Len Foss's presentation on the dangers faced when fighting grow op fires, Plecas noted that, compared to an normal home, a grow op house has 24 times the risk of having a fire, and on average, grow op fires cause twice the amount of damage. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin