Pubdate: Fri, 13 Jan 2006 Source: Surrey Leader (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Surrey Leader Contact: http://www.surreyleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1236 Author: Rick Kupchuk Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) DRUG USE TOPS KWANTLEN DEBATE A gathering of 20 students from Kwantlen University College heard just half of the debate in Surrey-North, as only four of the constituency's eight federal election candidates were present for an all-candidates meeting Wednesday evening at the Surrey campus. Penny Priddy of the New Democratic Party (NDP) was the highest profile candidate absent from the 75-minute session, the first of three staged in the Student Union Cafe by the Kwantlen Students Association. Priddy's campaign staff said Thursday confusion over the meeting time and a conflict in Priddy's schedule prevented her from attending . Only Dave Matta of the Conservative party, Green party candidate Roy Whyte, Liberal hopeful Surjit Kooner and Kevin Pielak of the Christian Heritage Party were present, with Whyte earning the loudest applause when he voiced his party's support for decriminalizing possession of marijuana. "It's not a gateway drug that leads to use of stronger drugs, studies show that," Whyte said. "We have 200,000 Canadians with a criminal record for simple possession. Billions of dollars are wasted in the fight against mairujuana. "Methadone, heroine, cocaine -- those are drugs thar destroy people and families." The statement raised the ire of Matta, who said "decriminalization would be a disaster. I'm a counsellor, I know marijuana is definitely a gateway drug." The Conservative position is to get tough on those in the drug trade, and reach out to those seeking rehabilitation. "Grow-ops, and the use of crack cocaine and crystal meth is increasing dramatically," Matta said. "Police are frustrated with the repeat offenders. Increased mandatory sentencing stops the revolving door. "And if you want to change, want to get out, we're there." Kooner also backed tougher penalties for drug crimes, but Pielak said stiffer sentencing is not the answer. "I don't believe the solution is mandatory sentencing, it only puts more people in jail," he said. "If we catch people, they'll have to pay every cent back to the victim. We'll take their house, their cars, make them do community service." Matta criticized the Liberal government for damaging federal-provincial relations by cutting transfer payments over the past 13 years. "The federal government says `we have a surplus,' while the provincial governments are saying `we don't have enough money for health and education'," he said. "Billions of dollars in transfer payments were cut and we all suffered. We have to increase the transfers, so more money can be spent on health and education." Kooner defended the cuts, noting the Liberals had to deal with a $42-billion deficit left by the previous Conservative government, and said all money transferred to provincial governments must be accounted for. "Money from the federal government must have a benchmark set," he insisted. "If the province says `give us money, and we will determine how to use it,' we say no. Any transferred money must have a target." In addition to Priddy, Nikolas Langlands of the Progressive Canadian Party, and independents Nina Rivet and John Baloun were not present. Kwantlen hosted a meeting for Fleetwood-Port Kells candidates Thursday (after The Leader's deadline), and hosts Newton-North Delta candidates today (Friday) at 4:30 p.m. at the Surrey campus. Fleetwood-Port Kells candidates will also meet Jan. 18 at 7 p.m. at Fraser Heights Secondary School, 16060 108 Ave. The meeting is sponsored by the Fraser Heights and Fleetwood community associations. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin