Pubdate: Sat, 12 Oct 2013 Source: Timaru Herald (New Zealand) Copyright: 2013 Timaru Herald Contact: http://www.timaruherald.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1039 LEGAL HIGHS 'BETTER THAN SYNTHETIC LOWS' The Aotearoa Legalise Cannabis Party's leader believes new laws regulating synthetic cannabinoids mean the "dam is about to break" for cannabis legalisation. Party leader Michael Appleby was in Timaru yesterday on his way to party's annual conference in Dunedin. "We've been around years. "We actually held our first ever conference in Timaru. I don't think we're a ginger group. "Every little push we make has got our views closer to the mainstream." He said the recently passed Psychoactive Substances Act, which regulates the sale and supply of synthetic cannabinoids, was a step in the right direction. "We just want a similar legal framework for cannabis. It is far better to have legal highs than synthetic lows." Mr Appleby said the opening of the Cannabis Museum in Dunedin last week was also a chance for people not aware of the drug's history to get a broader perspective. "Slowly, people are coming around to our way of thinking. Sixteen years ago, there was no access to medicinal marijuana, and there was no hemp industry." Cannabis use in New Zealand is still illegal, with the substance classed as a Class B or C drug under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1975. Last year, a Law Commission report called for a mandatory cautioning scheme for all personal possession and use offences, removing minor drug offenders from the criminal justice system and providing greater opportunities for those in need of treatment to access it. "These weren't long-haired radicals. "These were pretty straight old men," Mr Appleby said. "Like all drugs, there are health issues with cannabis, but you can't address them properly unless you legalise it. We're getting closer to that point. "The dam is about to break." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom