Pubdate: Thu, 28 Jul 2016 Source: Metro (Vancouver, CN BC) Copyright: 2016 Metro Canada Contact: http://www.metronews.ca/vancouver Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3775 Author: David P. Ball Page: 7 TIME FOR 'ADULT' TALK ON DRUGS The province's health minister didn't shy away Wednesday from Metro's question about legalizing harder illicit drugs. That was one proposal that would undercut the profit motive of drug dealers manufacturing and lacing other drugs with deadly fentanyl, said Leslie McBain, the mother of an overdose victim. Asked about McBain's call to "end the war on drugs," B.C. Health Minister Terry Lake emphasized that the regulation of controlled substances falls to the federal government. "I don't want to overstep the bounds here," he told Metro. "But we are having an adult conversation in Canada about drugs - particularly around marijuana and the legalization of marijuana. "Some people believe it will substitute for more harmful drugs like opioids. In Canada this conversation is evolving. It won't happen overnight, we don't really have the jurisdiction to take action that way, but as Canadians the conversation is changing around our attitudes towards the consumption of illicit substances." One important attitude shift, he added, is that the medical community and evidence is unanimous that drug addiction is a disease, not a personal choice or failing. "It is a contagion - not an infection but a social contagion - and we have to address it," he explained, responding to citizens outraged over his earlier comments comparing overdoses to an Ebola outbreak. "It's killing our citizens. "We should be doing something about that just like if they were mailing anthrax through the mail or Ebola or SARS coming through our airports... This is a health issue, not a crime issue." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt