Pubdate: Tue, 08 Mar 2016 Source: Guardian, The (UK) Copyright: 2016 Guardian News and Media Limited Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/175 Author: Alan Travis LIB DEMS DEVISE MODEL FOR LEGAL CANNABIS Cannabis should be sold over the counter in plain packaging in specialist, licensed shops to over-18s only, according to an expert panel set up by the Liberal Democrats to examine what a regulated cannabis market in Britain should look like. They suggest cannabis should be sold in three strengths - lower, medium and higher - in prescription medicine-style resealable childproof containers with a health warning. The panel also recommends that smallscale licensed "cannabis social clubs" should be set up, and that home-grown cultivation of up to four plants for personal use should be allowed. The Liberal Democrats are set to debate a motion at their spring conference this weekend which would see them become the first of the big British political parties to support the legalisation of cannabis for recreational use. Tim Farron, the party leader, said: "Prohibition of cannabis has failed ... It is a waste of police time to go after young people using cannabis and ludicrous to saddle them with criminal convictions that can damage their future careers. A legal market would allow us to have more control over what is sold, and raise a considerable amount in taxation." The report, which partly draws on Cabinet Office work done when Nick Clegg was deputy prime minister, says that credible estimates suggest regulated cannabis sales could raise UKP500m to UKP1 billion in taxation. It suggests that the pricing of cannabis products should be directly linked to potency and weight. So a gram with 5% THC (the active ingredient in cannabis) should cost a third of the price of a gram of 15% THC potency. The expert panel included Mike Barton, the chief constable of Durham, Professor David Nutt, the former chair of the government's advisory council on the misuse of drugs, and Tom Lloyd, the former Cambridgeshire chief constable, who is chair of the national cannabis coalition. The experts argue that a closely regulated legal market in herbal cannabis could displace synthetic "legal highs" with their unknown effects and high-potency cannabis and other forms that increasingly dominate the illicit market and have been linked to higher risk of dependency and psychosis. The cannabis "off-licences" - separate from retail chemists, "who may feel it is in conflict with their duty of medical care" - and online retail sites would be supplied only by UK-based producers licensed by a cannabis regulatory authority. Imports and exports would be banned. The panel rejects the development of Dutch-style cannabis cafes in Britain , anticipating that people will smoke cannabis in pub gardens. The cannabis social clubs would be modelled on a 400-strong Spanish network of clubs. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom