Pubdate: Fri, 30 Mar 2012 Source: Alberni Valley Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2012 Alberni Valley Times Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouverisland/albernivalleytimes/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4043 Author: Brett Bonderud Referenced: Improving community health and safety in Canada through evidence-based policies on illegal drugs: http://www.openmedicine.ca/article/view/501/455 CRIMINALIZING POT NOT WORKING: REPORT SAYS Alberni Hemp Shop Owner Says Marijuana Is a Healthy Alternative to Drinking Alcohol and Smoking Criminalizing marijuana use and other illicit drugs has not worked, and instead the product should be regulated and taxed, public health officials from across Canada says in a report published earlier this week. Doctors from British Columbia, Nova Scotia and Saskatchewan paralleled the United States prohibition of alcohol in the 1920s to current drug policies in an article published in the journal of Open Medicine on Wednesday. "Prohibition has proven remarkably resistant to law enforcement efforts, while unintended consequences have similarly emerged," the report said. According to the report's findings, a recent World Health Organization study demonstrated that international rates of drug use were unrelated to how vigorously drug laws were enforced, concluding that "countries with stringent user-level illegal drug policies did not have lower levels of use than countries with liberal ones." According to a U.S. government study referenced in the journal article, the $1.4 billion advertising campaign in the U.S. had been ineffective at curtailing rates of drug use by youth and may actually have had the negative effect of inflating youths' perceptions regarding rates of drug use among their peers. The report also stated "when the Office of the Auditor General of Canada last reviewed the country's drug strategy, in 2001, it estimated that of the $454 million spent annually on efforts to control illicit drugs, $426 million was devoted to law enforcement." A police bust of an illegal grow op containing 100 marijuana plants translates on average into 100 hours spent by law enforcement, Port Alberni RCMP spokeswoman Cpl. Jen Allan said. Three to four plants from that bust yield about a pound of marijuana. The street value is estimated at roughly $2,400, Allan said. It is a product that could and should be taxed according to the report. Frank Allen, owner of Port Alberni's West Coast Hemp Inc., said he was not adverse to a marijuana tax. "Marijuana is a healthy alternative to alcohol and cigarettes and should be taxed if regulated," he said. People come into his business to buy cannabis, but he sends them on their way. "When they find out I don't sell it, I tell them to get a medical marijuana licence," he said. There is no charge for a medical marijuana licence, marijuana activist Mik Mann said. But governments not taxing the marijuana industry as a whole are "missing the boat" Mann said. He said they should legalize and regulate the product. "It is less harmful than alcohol or cigarettes," Allen said. A recent Angus Reid poll estimated that 50% of Canadians already support legalization of cannabis. Portugal decriminalized all drug use in 2001 and has seen no increases in drug-related harms, the report said. According to the report the country's decriminalization was followed by "reductions in problematic use, drug-related harms and criminal justice overcrowding," with rates of drug use remaining among the lowest in the European Union. Something that does not surprise Mann. "Legalize, regulate, educate and medicate," he said. At press time Nanaimo-Alberni Conservative MP James Lunney was unavailable for comment. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom