Pubdate: Tue, 28 Apr 2015 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2015 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.torontosun.com/letter-to-editor Website: http://torontosun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Joe Warmington Page: 8 BLAIR NOW AT ODDS WITH OLD BRETHREN Bill Blair may now be in favour of legalizing marijuana but the national chief's organization he often boasts having led is certainly not. "Our position has not changed," Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police (CACP) spokesman Tim Smith said Monday. No longer Toronto's chief of police, and now a federal Liberal nomination hopeful, Blair's position is clearly different than his chief of police brethren. "I have seen merely criminalizing marijuana hasn't been successful in keeping it out of the hands of kids, it hasn't kept organized crime out of the business," he told the CBC in Ottawa where he later shared the stage with Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau. "I think we can do better, through legalization and regulation, coupled with a strong public health response." But in 2013 at the CACP's 108th conference in Winnipeg, which Blair attended, the chiefs adopted a resolution stating "the CACP does not support the decriminalization or legalization of cannabis or any other illicit substance" and "the illicit use of cannabis has a negative impact on public safety and the health of young persons." They also said "cannabis is a drug that impairs cognitive function (and) can cause delusional thoughts or hallucinations." While chief of police in Toronto, Blair's position on the legalization of pot was not publicly known. As a possible political candidate, Blair's position undoubtedly sent a shock around the country's policing community. What he said will either be a great help in Trudeau's quest to become prime minister and to change the country's rules on marijuana, or be the hot button that will keep Prime Minister Stephen Harper at 24 Sussex. Either way, April 27 could go down as an important day in the discussion of marijuana. Certainly this was the day Blair said if Canada does "regulate marijuana" it could mean "the decision whether or not to sell to a young person isn't going to be made by some gangsters in a stairwell, it will be made by a government employee based on strong regulations that have been well articulated and we will be able to do a much better job of keeping drugs out of the hands of young people." Yet exactly one week ago to the day, then chief Blair had his officers readying to take part in a major drug bust that would nab 36 people, many of whom were charged with the possession of illegal drugs including marijuana. Then seven days later Blair tells the country he actually favours the legalization of the very drug his officers knocked down doors to take off the street. The first person I contacted about the former chief's epiphany was the Toronto's new chief Mark Saunders. Saunders, who will be formerly sworn in in late May, has yet to respond but it will be interesting to get his take. When asked, CACP spokesman Tim Smith said, "We will not get into the politics of such a discussion." However, CACP states there is "growing evidence cannabis can have a negative impact on the development of the brain in young persons and some form of mental illness among young adults have been attributed to frequent cannabis use." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom