Pubdate: Wed, 24 Sep 2008 Source: Powell River Peak (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Peak Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.prpeak.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/734 Author: Laura Walz Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Dana+Larsen (Dana Larsen) NEW DEMOCRATS NAME CANDIDATE Forst Takes Over The Banner In West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast-Sea To Sky A new candidate has been named to run for the New Democratic Party (NDP) in West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast-Sea to Sky Country riding. Bill Forst, a 35-year resident of Gibsons and a recently retired school counsellor, was nominated on Friday night, September 19. Forst quickly filled the vacancy left when Dana Larsen resigned on September 17 after questions about his involvement with a seed company that sold coca plants arose, followed by videos surfacing of him taking LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) and smoking marijuana while driving a vehicle. Another NDP candidate, Kirk Tousaw, a civil libertarian lawyer, dropped out in Vancouver-Quadra citing his past work on drug policy reform. Forst, who also ran as the NDP candidate for Sunshine Coast-Powell River in the 1996 provincial election, told the Peak the resignations have not hurt the party or his campaign in the riding. "The issues that have been the big, public media stuff are 10-year-old issues," he said. "People realize that the people involved in that were nominated 10 years after those issues and they're different people." People have already indicated great support for his candidacy, Forst added. "I've been overwhelmed by emails and phone calls from people who are pleased to have me as a candidate and will be supporting and working for us," he said. Forst is the former president of the Sunshine Coast Teachers' Association and the BC School Counsellors Association. He is the past president of the Sunshine Coast Music Society and current president of the Driftwood Players Amateur Theatre Company. The main issue on the federal level is leadership, Forst said. "Polling shows that Jack Layton is the most popular opposition leader," he said. "I think that's the case for our riding as well." For him personally, the key issues are the environment and climate change, Forst said, adding he supports the NDP's policy of a cap and trade on emissions, as opposed to a carbon tax. "Definitely it has to be the big polluters who pay," he said. "I'm really concerned about the fact that we all have to contribute to conservation and reduction of greenhouse gases. I don't believe the carbon tax is the fair way to go; it's regressive. It makes the average family pay the bigger shot, whereas the cap and trade system places it back on the corporations who make the decisions." Larsen said he resigned because he didn't want his involvement with advocating for the legalization of marijuana to become a distraction for Layton. "The one thing I do regret of all the videos that came out, the only thing I kind of step back from is when I say I'm going to smoke a joint before I drive home," he said. "I don't advocate driving impaired. That's pretty much it. I don't regret taking LSD. I don't regret helping make coca plants available to people. Those are all things that I do, that are part of me, like millions of other Canadians out there who have taken psychedelics or who smoke marijuana. I don't think that should cut us out from political discourse or make us ineligible for office." However, the time for having a nuanced debate about the issue wasn't right, Larsen added. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom