Pubdate: Wed, 14 Dec 2016 Source: Barrie Examiner (CN ON) Copyright: 2016, Barrie Examiner Contact: http://www.thebarrieexaminer.com/letters Website: http://www.thebarrieexaminer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2317 Author: Cheryl Browne Page: A1 Referenced: http://mapinc.org/url/spC7LQBu MARIJUANA GETS GREEN LIGHT Canada's Marijuana Task Force gave the green light to the green leaf, Tuesday. While legislation still must be written and and passed through Parliament, smokers of the bud were blown away by the federally appointed task force's recommendation the government legislate the recreational sale of marijuana to the general public. "We are super happy here, so glad to see this program is going forward," said Stephanie Brown, manager of the new Cannabis Supply Company in Barrie's south end. The store does not have cannabis on site, but does sell medical marijuana supplies such as vaporizers, water pipes, cookbooks and educational books, as well as setting up appointments for clients to meet with cannabis-friendly physicians. "This is a huge step forward in the right direction. So many people benefit from it and this will help get rid of the black market," Brown said. The federal task force recommends cannabis could be sold in storefront locations, but it recommends a ban of locating cannabis within stores selling alcohol and tobacco products, which is a blow to some provinces, such as Ontario, which had hoped to sell marijuana in government-owned liquor stores. The report also recommended tax revenues generated from the sale of cannabis should be directed toward public education campaigns and further research on the health risks associated with marijuana consumption. Barrie Coun. Rose Romita, who represents the downtown area, said she'd like to see the zoning bylaws changed to ensure marijuana stores are separated by 100 metres, such as Barrie's bylaw for tattoo parlours, body-piercing parlours, pawn shops and pay-day loan establishments. "We want the downtown to be diverse, we don't want it to be covered in people coming downtown to get drugs. We already have that problem," Romita said. "I think we should legalize it, get the tax revenue and put that towards education, because people are doing it anyway." The national task force was led by former deputy prime minister Anne McLellan. She said cannabis sales should be legalized across Canada, but suggested restricting the sale to people 18 and over and allowing a personal possession limit of 30 grams. "Our current laws allowed illicit criminal organizations to flourish in this area," McLellan said during a news conference Tuesday morning. "Our current prohibition is not working." The Canadian Medical Association had recommended setting the age at 21, but the task force said higher age limits would simply drive young consumers into the hands of the black market, something the government hopes to actively discourage with its push to legalize. The nine U.S. jurisdictions with current legalized-marijuana sales have matched the age limit to the drinking age of 21. A call to Barrie MPP Ann Hoggarth's office was returned by Ontario's attorney general, Yasir Naqvi, who is speaking on behalf of the provincial government on the task force's findings. Naqvi said the province plans to review the report and work collaboratively with federal, provincial and territorial counterparts. "We have been clear the federal government's approach to legalizing recreational marijuana must prioritize the protection of youth and vulnerable people, promote public health and safety, and focus on prevention and harm reduction," Naqvi said. "Ontarians want and deserve to see that balance," she added. Weaved through its 80 recommendations, the task force has determined Ottawa should impose many of the same restrictions that currently apply to alcohol and tobacco sales, namely limits on advertising of cannabis, to discourage use by young people. Barrie Police Chief Kimberley Greenwood said the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police has worked closely with the federal government to ensure the legislation is broad in its regulatory scope. "Our priority is safety and how this legislation is going to impact the community as a whole," Greenwood said. Greenwood said police are hoping to help build the regulatory framework that would see specific controls in place for the growth, cultivation and sales of marijuana. Her other concern is that law enforcement doesn't currently have a roadside drug test - as they do for alcohol - to determine a driver's level of impairment. "We'd need to have roadside testing tools available to us. We use breathalyzers for alcohol impairment, but we'd need an instrument to be able to measure the limits of marijuana impairment. What is impaired (by marijuana)? We don't know what the legal limit is," Greenwood said. The task force noted in its report the government should help develop a body of research on the effects of cannabis-impaired driving. Yet, the report did not recommend a set price for cannabis, but suggested higher taxes on cannabis with elevated levels of tetrahydrocannabinol - or THC, the chemical responsible for most of marijuana's psychological effects - to discourage use. Barrie-Innisfil MP John Brassard said he is not in support of legalizing marijuana because he believes the public's health has to be at the forefront of the government's decision to legalize the plant. Brassard doesn't believe the report goes far enough. "The task-force report does nothing to answer the impact of health and safety within our community with respect to how it will be kept out of the hands of young people and how policing agencies will handle impaired driving caused by the use of marijuana," Brassard wrote in a news release. "I fear that the costs of dealing with those two issues alone will further stretch police force's budgets, and in turn increase property taxes, with little to no help from the federal government." However, Brassard says he does believe in the use of medical marijuana for health and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) issues. "I have seen first-hand the impact medical marijuana has had on my cousin who suffers from epilepsy and I've also heard from many veterans and their spouses dealing with PTSD. "Medicinal marijuana has given them a far greater degree of normalcy in their lives by getting them off the potent and expensive concoction of pills that have physically and emotionally drained them," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt