Pubdate: Mon, 04 Jan 2016 Source: Ottawa Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2016 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.ottawasun.com/letter-to-editor Website: http://www.ottawasun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/329 Author: Jenny Yuen Page: 13 PETITION AGAINST POT Keep Weed Away From Schools, Candidate Urges TORONTO - Selling marijuana at LCBO stores is a dangerous equation for children, insists a trustee candidate for Ward 21. Holding a clipboard and pen, parent Sharon Kerr knocked on doors in the Old Finch Ave. area on Sunday as part of her effort to get 1,000 signatures in two weeks on a petition which tells the province to prohibit pot sales at LCBO stores within 500 metres of Toronto's schools. "In speaking to parents, (they) aren't interested in having pot sold anywhere near schools," she said. "It's going to go to wherever it needs to go to get it stopped, including the province or municipally. We don't need to be challenged with kids being high." In mid-December, Premier Kathleen Wynne said "it makes a lot of sense" to rely on the LCBO, which Sharon Kerr is getting people in her area of Scarborough to sign a petition to ensure no LCBO outlets are within 500 metres of a school if they end up selling marijuana as proposed by Premier Kathleen Wynne, Sunday. operates more than 600 stores across Ontario, to sell marijuana after the federal government legalizes the sale of the drug. Kerr is running in a Jan. 25 byelection to replace former Toronto District School Board trustee Shaun Chen, who won a seat as a Liberal MP in the last federal election. Kerr said she believes allowing legal pot to be sold near schools would influence usage among elementary and high school kids. She is also afraid that if booze can be sold in cafes and restaurants, marijuana may be as well. "I'm sure no one will sell to minors, but who is there to stop those who are motivated to get (fake) IDs? I can tell you certain schools within the (Toronto District School Board) where students come to school drunk. Why open it up to this platform?" Ida Lai, 62, a grandparent who signed the petition, said "no one wants second-hand smoke. I like the mostly what the new government is doing, but this is the one thing I can't stand. We spend a lot of time teaching kids when they're young to not smoke and now marijuana is everywhere." Jennifer Beaudry, a spokesman for Premier Kathleen Wynne, noted Wynne addressed the issue in December. "We need to talk about what we are comfortable with as a society in terms of the distribution of this new substance," Wynne said at the time. "I think leaving it to random distribution is not acceptable. I think that it is going to be controlled in some way. And I will wait for the federal government's direction on that." Keerthana Kamalavasan, spokesman for Mayor John Tory, said the city will wait to hear from the province. "When the federal government's process begins on the legalization and regulation of marijuana, the mayor believes the City of Toronto should and will be consulted." [sidebar] Talking Pot What people are saying about the proposed LCBO plan: Warren "Smokey" Thomas, president of the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU) - which represents LCBO employees - said the most socially responsible place to sell legal marijuana would be through the government-owned liquor retail chain. "If legalization happens, marijuana must be a controlled substance, and no one has more experience retailing controlled substances than the workers at the LCBO," Thomas said. "The LCBO has a solid track record of responsibly selling alcohol and would bring the same service standard to marijuana." Premier Kathleen Wynne: "It makes sense to me that the liquor distribution mechanism that we have in place - the LCBO - is very well-suited to putting in place the social responsibility aspects that would need to be in place ... Obviously, I don't know what the timeline is with the federal government, but it seems to me that using that distribution network of the LCBO ... I think that that makes a lot of sense." Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the existing justice system for marijuana does not work. He also couldn't specify an exact timeline of how the federal government would be controlling and taxing the drug. "It does not prevent young people from using marijuana and too many Canadians end up with criminal records for possessing small amounts of the drug," according to the federal Liberal party. "To ensure that we keep marijuana out of the hands of children, and the profits out of the hands of criminals, we will legalize, regulate, and restrict access to marijuana." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom