Pubdate: Sat, 24 Sep 2016 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2016 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Andrew Seymour Page: A3 NAQVI ON HOSPITAL, POT & BAIL The Ontario attorney general and Ottawa Centre MPP wants a central Civic site, an end to marijuana law's 'grey zone' and bail reform to cut jail crowding, Andrew Seymour writes after Yasir Naqvi met with the Citizen editorial board. ON THE SEARCH FOR NEW OTTAWA HOSPITAL SITE As public consultation on a new site for the Ottawa Hospital's Civic campus officially began Thursday, Yasir Naqvi said his preference is that the hospital remains centrally located. That means proposed locations along West Hunt Club Road aren't the best choices from a dozen available federal sites, according to Naqvi. "What I hear from my constituents, those are too far away," said Naqvi, who attended the public consultation. "They overlap too much with the catchment areas of a hospital like the Queensway-Carleton Hospital. "I think as you are looking into building a 21st-century hospital which will not only provide urgent care and ambulatory care, but also tertiary and primary care for the entire region, it should be centrally located. It should utilize the public transit infrastructure that is being built." The debate about where to put the new $2-billion hospital has been mired in controversy since the previous federal government announced in 2014 that it was giving the hospital 60 acres of the Central Experimental Farm land to build on, across from the hospital's current location. When he goes door-to-door meeting constituents, Naqvi said he isn't hearing a lot of opposition to the site being on the farm. "I'm not undermining the opposition, I think the Farm is a very valuable piece of land, and that's why I'm very glad there is a process in place to evaluate all those elements," said Naqvi. However, some of those opposing the farm location don't live in the community and "they were not providing an alternative," Naqvi said. Naqvi said a proposed site at the eastern part of the farm near Prince of Wales Drive and Carling Avenue could be an "interesting compromise" since it is essentially brownfield and not being used for scientific research or cultural reasons. It would also be on the city's O-Train line. The Booth Street site is interesting, but "I don't think the land mass is sufficient there," said Naqvi. Tunney's Pasture is also a possibility, but "I know the federal government has some other plans for Tunney's," Naqvi said. ON THE LEGALIZATION OF MARIJUANA On Friday, Naqvi was given his mandate letter from the premier tasking him with developing a regulatory framework in anticipation of the federal government's legalization of marijuana for recreational use. Naqvi said the task won't be easy, because Ontario and other provinces are "in a grey zone" until they know exactly what form the federal legislation will take when it's expected to be tabled in 2017. "The concern I have is, how long is this grey zone going to last, because there is a lot of work to be done," said Naqvi. Naqvi said the province is a long way from discussing whether marijuana will be sold alongside alcohol in the LCBO. Naqvi said there hasn't been much cabinet discussion about marijuana yet, but the province has created an inter-ministerial task force including representatives from finance, community safety, health, transportation, community and social services and the ministry of children and youth services. They are currently doing a canvas of policy options, which includes watching and meeting with jurisdictions such as Washington State and Colorado, as they have already legalized marijuana, Naqvi said. He said the two primary areas of concern are the distribution of it and how society will be safeguarded from its use. "Safeguards are very important to us, protecting the youth, figuring out what the right age is going to be. Keeping our roads safe is a very, very important part of the deliberation, and harm reduction - we cannot undermine that particular aspect. It is still an addictive product, it does have an impact on people." ON BAIL REFORM Naqvi said one of his top priorities attorney general is reforming Ontario's bail and remand system, and that he plans to announce an "action plan" by the end of the year. Ontario's bail system is blamed for overcrowding in provincial jails such as the Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre. It's estimated 63 per cent of inmates in Ontario's jails are being held on remand while awaiting their trials. "I am not interested in more studies or more strategies. I think we have got a lot of that," said Naqvi. Naqvi said the province's proposed reforms would address diversion at the police station before a person is charged, as well as try to deal with issues surrounding onerous bail conditions and the need for sureties to monitor an accused person. Naqvi said a six-month pilot program has embedded a Crown attorney with the Ottawa police to ensure appropriate charges are laid. The province is also trying to find better solutions for those with mental-health and addiction issues, and make sure community supports such as bail beds are available to ensure "we're not just setting them up to breach their bail conditions," said Naqvi. "We have to balance that off with public safety. I think we need to really start with low-risk accused first and then sort of look up the scale, but we do find that, looking at the data, a lot of people who get into remand that causes the numbers to go up are people on the low-risk end of things," he said. Naqvi said the province is working with judges, lawyers, the federal government, police and social services agencies to find solutions. "They all see the need to deal with this," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt