Pubdate: Tue, 29 Jan 2013 Source: StarPhoenix, The (CN SN) Copyright: 2013 The StarPhoenix Contact: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/400 Author: Betty Ann Adam Page: 3 CANDIDATE BACKS POT, HEALTH-CARE REFORM Liberal leadership candidate Martha Hall Findlay, supports full legalization of marijuana. Prohibition has never worked and marijuana should be regulated and taxed, the Toronto lawyer and businesswoman, who emerged as one of three front-runners after this month's candidates' debate, told members of The Star-Phoenix editorial board Monday. The former Ontario MP also advocates private delivery health care in a publicly funded system, elimination of supply management for dairy, poultry and egg producers and repealing the Indian Act. "When we talk about evidence-based (policy), let's walk the walk and show Canadians that we have the guts to say, if that's what the evidence is, that's what we should do," she said. "I'm in favour of full legalization of marijuana," Hall Findlay said. "All of the evidence says it needs to be treated the same as alcohol. Kids can get marijuana more easily than alcohol. "Take it out of the gangs, take it out of criminal violence. Regulate it and tax it," she said. Hall Findlay also believes the publicly funded healthcare system could benefit from private delivery. "We have to take our heads out of the sand and look at what we can do in order to save a universally accessible, single-tier, publicly funded system, which is something I really want to save," she said. People "freak out" at the suggestion of private health care, equating it with the American, for-profit system, but they forget Canadian doctors run publicly funded private enterprises, she said. While Hall Findlay is market-oriented, she doesn't advocate "complete free market in something that is as important to us as (health care)," she said. She puts her faith in government oversight and government involvement through the Canada Health Act. Hall Findlay is pleased that Canada now has six female premiers and believes her being a woman won't be held against her at the polls. She congratulated the Saskatchewan aboriginal women who started the Idle No More movement, saying, "We have to get back to a sense of mutual respect." Much good will was wasted when the Conservative government tossed the Liberals' Kelowna Accord in 2005 and that sense of co-operation must be revived, she said. The Indian Act needs to be repealed, but it needs to be done properly with "significant transition elements," she said. Members of the Idle No More movement have made a strong argument against the Harper government's omnibus budget bill, which she called "a complete, utter abuse of our democratic process in Parliament." "This government brought out a secret manual on how to disrupt committees, on how (to) disrupt the democratic process to (their) own ends," she said. "We need steps to regain the role of committees... "I would take active measures to improve question period and I would take active measures to prevent the abuse of omnibus bills like that. "Congratulations to the people who started it and pursued Idle No More because they've highlighted that, arguably better than we did." Hall Findlay said she isn't as famous as front-running candidate Justin Trudeau, who arrives in Saskatoon today, and former astronaut Marc Garneau, who visited the city earlier this month, but she has "a hell of a resume" that she'll proudly stand against theirs. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt