Pubdate: Thu, 25 Feb 2016 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2016 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Ian Mulgrew Page: A1 VANCOUVER JUDGE THROWS OUT MEDICAL POT RULES Ill People Can Grow Their Own, Federal Court Says The Federal Court of Canada lit a fire under Liberal marijuana legalization plans Wednesday, declaring the old Tory medical pot scheme unconstitutional. In a stinging indictment, Judge Michael Phelan said the Conservatives' 2013 regulations on medical marijuana violated the liberty and security interests of the charter. "The access restrictions did not prove to reduce risk to health and safety or to improve access to marijuana - the purported objectives of the regulation," wrote Phelan, who heard evidence in the case last spring in Vancouver. "In sum, the law goes too far and interferes with some conduct that bears no connection to its objectives." He gave the government six months to fix the legislation, suggesting a much more relaxed approach that allowed personal growing operations and dispensaries. A longtime cannabis crusader, lawyer John Conroy said Ottawa should let the 30-day appeal period lapse and move quickly on new laws. He envisioned a legalized regulatory environment similar to that for alcohol, with a role for all three levels of government, Ottawa setting excise taxes. That would put the political hot potato of regulating legal pot into the hands of the provinces - the same as alcohol - with municipalities having a role in land use, permitting and inspection of growing operations. An injunction that shielded former licensed growers from prosecution until Phelan's ruling was extended. Although not part of any previous medical pot scheme, Phelan called the more than 100 illegal dispensaries across the country "the heart of cannabis access." Kirk Tousaw, a Vancouver Island lawyer in the case, was overjoyed. "His historic decision represents a nearly complete victory for patients using medical cannabis in Canada," he said. "I call upon the prime minister to act much more swiftly and immediately end all criminal sanctions against medical cannabis patients and their providers. In addition, the justice minister should immediately dismiss all pending criminal cases involving medical cannabis producers and dispensaries." Phelan concluded the medical benefits of the plant are largely undisputed and recognized, though he acknowledged that much of the information about cannabis and its efficacy is anecdotal. In the 103-page decision, he shredded Ottawa's defence of the regulations and the disinformation propagated by police and fire officials. "Many 'expert' witnesses were so imbued with a belief for or against marijuana - almost a religious fervour - that the court had to approach such evidence with a significant degree of caution and skepticism," the judge added. He completely dismissed the RCMP expert testimony on home invasions, violence and the diversion of pot by organized crime. Health Canada, Phelan said, had no information licensed growers "ever overproduced their licences, diverted marijuana to the black market, produced unsafely, caused smells, had any fires, produced any mouldy marijuana or suffered any negative health consequences from consuming their medicine." For 15 years, the country has tried to establish a working medical program after the Supreme Court of Canada, at the turn of the century, said seriously ill patients had a right to access to cannabis. Phelan said "the judicial teachings were that access for approved medical patients is mandated by the charter and that restrictions on access, use and supply were to be strictly limited." Under the Conservative government's 2013 rules, only authorized licensed corporations were allowed to grow and sell medical cannabis. The personal and designated-grower licences permitted under the old rules were eliminated in favour of a courier-and-mail-order delivery system. But growers and patients across the country challenged the constitutionality of those regulations, saying they violated liberty and security rights. The new Liberal administration has promised to legalize marijuana and appointed parliamentary secretary to the justice minister, Bill Blair, Toronto's former top cop, to study the issue. Although Phelan's judgment was not concerned with recreational pot, it will no doubt be considered as the Liberals decide how they will legalize marijuana, which the party promised to do during the last election campaign. There are an estimated 38,000 or so licensed medical pot users across the country, about 17,000 who reputedly buy from the new firms. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom