Pubdate: Thu, 10 Nov 2016 Source: Northumberland Today (CN ON) Copyright: 2016 Sun Media Contact: http://www.northumberlandtoday.com/letters Website: http://www.northumberlandtoday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5003 Author: Valerie MacDonald Page: A1 MP DISCUSSES MARIJUANA LEGISLATION WITH COUNCIL New legislation around medical marijuana - including its licensing and distribution - is expected in April, 2017. And it will be created after a task force that is working right now provides a report, Northumberland Peterborough South MP Kim Rudd told Hamilton Township councillors Tuesday. The council had asked the MP to the council session to answer questions about marijuana because of past complaints about grow ops in the township of which they knew nothing, members said, until they received a phone call from a neighbour. Rudd said that even under existing legislation, licensed growers must inform municipalities they are in operation (after first getting a licence from Health Canada) and comply with the township's zoning bylaws and the building and fire codes. "Are there repercussions for not complying?" Mayor Mark Lovshin asked. "Did you report it to Health Canada?" Rudd responded. Such a concern would have to come from the municipality, she advised. New legislation will make such non-compliance and criminal violations "clearer," Rudd said. "You are not the only municipality" having these issues, she added. At this time, storefronts and dispensaries are "illegal" and won't be in the new legislation, she said. And only medical marijuana will be the subject of the new law. It will only deal with dried marijuana for medical use. People who need it for medical purposes will be able to grow it at home or acquire it through a designated third party, she said. There will not be any decriminalization of marijuana "in the meantime" - that is, before the new legislation is created, Rudd said. Asked in a subsequent interview if decriminalization was on the horizon, Rudd said that it was a Justice matter and that an overhaul of the Criminal Code was underway, but she had no specific information on that issue. During the last election as head of the Liberal Party, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that the system of marijuana prohibition did not work. "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. Arresting and prosecuting these offences is expensive for our criminal justice system. It traps too many Canadians in the criminal justice system for minor, non-violent offences. At the same time, the proceeds from the illegal drug trade support organized crime and greater threats to public safety, like human trafficking and hard drugs," a Liberal election website states. "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. "We will remove marijuana consumption and incidental possession from the Criminal Code, and create new, stronger laws to punish more severely those who provide it to minors, those who operate a motor vehicle while under its influence, and those who sell it outside of the new regulatory framework." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt