Pubdate: Wed, 16 Jan 2008 Source: Eye Weekly (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 Eye Communications Ltd. Contact: http://www.eyeweekly.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/147 Author: Saada Branker Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) THIS IS YOUR LAW ON DRUGS In presenting the government's anti-drug plan in October, Prime Minister Stephen Harper never called it a "War on Drugs." But he talked tough about "breaking Canada's drug habit," and Justice Minister Rob Nicholson punctuated that sentiment by proposing a bill aimed at invoking mandatory jail sentences for drug offenders. Immediately, critics sounded off on what they saw as a host of inherent flaws in the government's whole approach to illicit drugs. One common strain of criticism pointed out that this is a familiar strategy once embraced by American policy-makers. Ironically, with drug-related crime still rampant and overcrowding in prisons in some states, mandatory minimum sentencing for drug crimes is currently under review in the US. Yet, despite the failures of Washington's drug policy, the Tories are determined that the American-styled law-and-order approach to drugs will work in Canada. To help rid the country of "its complacent attitude toward illicit drugs," the Conservatives committed $63.8 million over two years to fund more enforcement, prevention and treatment programs, conspicuously dropping an important component known as harm reduction in the process. That's a problem, say opponents of the government. The public-health alternatives derived from harm reduction, they say, would yield positive, long-term results for drug users aE" addicts who often deal drugs to support their dependency. Some of the different approaches being encouraged include treating drug use and abuse primarily as public health issues and not criminal ones; legalizing marijuana in order to emasculate a potent black market built on its illegal trade; and setting up harm-reduction initiatives similar to those that already exist for tobacco and alcohol. But if any of these alternatives are worth exploring, the Conservatives don't appear keen on doing it. The bill in question proposes amending the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA) so that a range of minimum penalties for drug offences will give judges rigid sentencing guidelines. (Retired Quebec judge John Gomery likened the legislation to "a slap in the face" for the judiciary.) If the bill passes, a one-year mandatory prison sentence will be imposed for drug-related crimes involving a weapon or violence; a two-year penalty will be required for dealing drugs like cocaine, heroin and meth to youth, or dealing near areas frequented by children; and running a marijuana grow-op of at least 500 plants will lead to a mandatory minimum of two years. The maximum penalty for cannabis production would increase from seven to 14 years. Certain offenders who complete a Drug Treatment Court program will be exempted from facing mandatory prison time. The new legislation is not going over well with Libby Davies, the NDP Deputy Leader and spokesperson on drug policy. She suggests the Conservatives' focus on enforcement ("scare tactics") at the expense of proper education and harm reduction is "very much ideologically driven." "I think they're trying to fool people. That somehow getting tough on crime and taking this kind of approach is going to make communities safer," Davies says. She thinks the opposite will happen. "Mr. Harper is clearly wanting to adopt the US model of a war on drugs." And what a model it is, say the critics. Twenty-two years ago, the US Congress enacted severe mandatory minimum penalties for crack-related offences. What resulted was unrelenting organized crime, increasing incarceration of so-called lower-level drug offenders and, ultimately, a disproportionate number of poor people, mainly African-Americans, being given unduly harsh sentences. Last month, the US Supreme Court ruled in favour of a return to more individualized sentences in drug cases, a retreat from the 1986 national guidelines. The following day, the American Sentencing Commission voted unanimously to apply this leniency retroactively for almost 20,000 prisoners serving time on crack-related charges. No one at the offices of the Health Minister Tony Clement or the Minister of Justice responded to requests for a telephone interview, but media officials provided written statements. GeneviA(ve Breton, director of communications for the justice minister's office, says the government's approach is designed to target serious drug offenders. "The proposed set of mandatory minimum penalties simply does not target minor drug offenders," writes Breton. "Only those drug traffickers who have aggravating factors in their cases, such as using violence or selling drugs near schools, will be eligible to receive the mandatory minimum sentence." Like Davies, the executive director of the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network believes the Conservatives' approach fails to recognize that many drug offenders resort to crime to support their habit. Richard Elliott says the root problem is one of addiction and the consequences of a market that supplies that addiction. "It's a health issue, and we keep throwing all these criminal law provisions at it, thinking this is somehow going to address that," says Elliott. His organization opposes mandatory minimum sentencing, and warns of overcrowding prisons with non-violent drug offenders who are also addicts. Such a move, it says, will worsen a public-health problem by increasing the risks of HIV and Hepatitis C transmissions. "We're not making a dent in drug markets: in fact, the sale and consumption of illegal drugs are steadily increasing. We are compounding the problems here and we're impeding health services for people that are much more likely to have an impact! ." Because the federal government excludes harm reduction aE" a component of the original national drug strategy aE" from its anti-drug plan, the status of certain health services remains in limbo. Last month Health Canada refused to grant Insite, the country's lone supervised-injection site, its requested three-year renewal, opting instead on a six-month extension. In a September 2007 press release, Tony Clement said that "the best form of harm reduction is to help addicts break the cycle of dependency." At a Canadian Medical Association meeting the health minister was quoted as saying, "Harm reduction, in a sense, takes many forms. To me, prevention is harm reduction. Treatment is harm reduction. Enforcement is harm reduction." Not so, said over 130 physicians and scientists who signed a petition the next day. It denounced the federal government for its "potentially deadly" misinformation on harm reduction programs. According to a report presented by a Toronto ad hoc committee for the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, "Harm reduction is any policy or program designed to reduce drug-related harm without requiring the cessation of drug use." Toronto criminal lawyer and Osgoode Law professor Alan Young says drug dependency is a complicated issue. "You can't really use law to change the situation. People will always use drugs," he says. "So then the question becomes, what's the most responsive governmental approach to a situation that most people handle responsibly and some people destroy their lives with?" Young, who for years has advocated the legalization of marijuana, says by resorting to criminal prohibition, governments create a black market. "When you take a criminal approach to the drug issue, you bring in a whole other Pandora's box of more serious crimes, and then the politicians blame the drugs, when in reality, it's their approach that is creating violence within the drug trade." Davies says there is a role in a national drug strategy for enforcement, but "not to the obliteration of other initiatives like harm reduction." Bill C-26 still has to pass second reading in the House of Commons and then be debated by a parliamentary committee before the Senate looks at it. Meanwhile, Davies pledges to keep up the campaign to save Insite, and to push for harm reduction programs throughout Canada. "Whether it's alcohol, tobacco or substances that are illegal, the most important thing we can do for people is provide really solid education that is realistically frank," says Davies. "So when people do face substance-abuse issues like addiction or dependency, they actually receive medical help in a way that's accessible and focused on the user." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake