Pubdate: Wed, 03 Sep 2008 Source: Alberni Valley Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Alberni Valley Times Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouverisland/albernivalleytimes/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4043 Author: Mike Bryan READER SAYS ANTI-DRUG FLYERS MISSING THE MARK THE EDITOR: Dear Dr. Lunney: I am surprised that you would allow your image and reputation to ride on the anti-drug flyer that arrived at my home today. I had thought better of you, particularly in light of your recent stand on Bill C-51. Have you seen the recently released 2007 crime statistics? Those data confirm that your government's war on drugs is, for the most part, a criminal law catchment and control device for cannabis users in this country. In its July 17, 2008 report in The Daily, Statistics Canada wrote: "Drug offences were among the few police-reported crimes to increase in 2007. The rate of drug offences rose 4% last year, driven by an increase in cannabis possession offences, which accounted for about half of all drug offences." I was Special Assistant and Editor of the Le Dain Commission in the early 1970s. One of the appendices of the Commission's Final Report that I drafted contained data on convictions and sentences for drug offences. Although publication of those informative data was discontinued in the mid-70s, I've been collecting Stats Can's annual report of the number of persons charged with cannabis offences every year since. From 1969 to 2007 police in Canada reported 972,401 persons charged with possession of cannabis. (Those charges were only reported if cannabis possession was the most serious offence involved in a given incident.) They were persons formally charged with possession -- not importing, cultivating or trafficking -- but simple possession of cannabis. I have no doubt that your party's fervent condemnation of marijuana in radio and TV ads and, by implication, in this latest anti-drug flyer will push that figure to 1,000,000 this year. Ever since the Le Dain Commission's Cannabis Report in 1972, federal governments (Liberal and Conservative) have considered "decriminalizing" cannabis possession. By that they have meant an approach that avoids a criminal record for persons charged with possession. For example, the 1972 discharge provisions of the Criminal Code were, according to then Health Minister John Munro, "a means whereby the courts could avoid imposing a criminal record on persons charged with cannabis possession." Contrary to popular belief, the discharge provisions never avoided a criminal record for any offence; and successive governments to this day have allowed this massive criminalization of young Canadians to continue unabated. Everyone knows there is nothing more damning or condemning for a young person than to start out in life with a criminal record. Your government could win half the war on drugs by simply dealing with this gross injustice once and for all. Until then, all its ranting against "junkies and addicts" will be seen for what it is: a cover for a mean-spirited political attack on the welfare of young Canadians. It's hard to believe that you, a medical healer, would knowingly endorse such a policy. I hope you will let us know that that isn't so. MIKE BRYAN Port Alberni - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath