Pubdate: Sat, 15 Apr 2017 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2017 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Marcus Sibley Page: D7 Referenced: Cannabis Act: http://mapinc.org/url/Kd46SXou TIME TO STOP LAYING CHARGES FOR HAVING POT Minister concedes current law is a mess, says Bill C-45, also referred to as the Cannabis Act, outlines the federal government's "robust regulatory framework" for legal marijuana. It makes several amendments to the Criminal Code, including provisions aimed at loosening penalties around possession and home cultivation (for personal use) as well as tightening laws that address impaired driving and youth access to marijuana. Government officials did not comment this week on the specifics of how provinces will execute a distribution plan, how cannabis will be taxed, and what kinds of revenues are expected to be generated. Yet despite the lack of specifics, the government has not wavered on its commitment to continue enforcing cannabis-related offences, upholding the position that the "law is the law" and rejecting the possibility of any moratorium on marijuana charges. Despite this firm stance on continued criminalization, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale called the current regime of criminalizing cannabis an "abject failure." The influx of marijuana-related offences not only clog our Canadian courts, they create a significant burden on local police departments, which spend a combined total of anywhere between $2 billion and $3 billion on enforcement. Yet Goodale wants to see the existing laws enforced until the bill passes. "As the bill moves through the legislative process, existing laws prohibiting possession and use of cannabis remain in place, and they need to be respected," he said. "This must be an orderly transition; it is not a free-for-all." Opting for an "evidence-informed approach" to marijuana, the Liberal government's growing mantra is that policy should be rooted in calculated expertise, not fervour. But Justin Trudeau and his team of "experts" continue to dangerously mix rational policy objectives with emotionally driven and morally laden rhetoric. Asked this week in Question Period if the prime minister felt he "deserved" a criminal record for his previous marijuana use, Trudeau simply restated his position that the continued enforcement of existing drug laws is the way to curb organized crime and keep marijuana out of the hands of children, going on to say marijuana is the drug easiest to obtain by youth. This statement turns out to be patently false. It remains unclear how the Liberals intends to deal with youth who consume and possess cannabis, but the fact remains that the criminal justice system only serves a punitive function, not an educational one. Punishing both youth and adults with criminal records or other criminal justice sanctions carries a long-lasting stigma with far-reaching consequences - something Trudeau had the privilege of avoiding while he used cannabis. The Cannabis Act also intends to strictly regulate how cannabis can be legally produced and distributed. This anxiety over who will be able to produce "legal" pot has raised concern, especially with those deeply rooted in the cannabis movement. Pioneers of the Canadian cannabis movement have seen their pot shops raided in the last several months, a targeted effort by local police to effectively shut down unlicensed dispensaries. Officers enter dispensaries wearing balaclavas, arresting and charging frontline employees with trafficking offences, and seizing small quantities of cannabis and money. It's likely that this will remain the trend until legalization. Such use of policing resources sends a clear message: Pot profits are for the corporate elites. Local growers and dispensaries are most likely going to have to continue to push back against the Canadian weed oligopoly. Legalization may provide the necessary infrastructure for "legitimate" revenue for a select few, but the government and licensed producers will still have to face competition with a growing market of unlicensed dispensaries. With almost 60,000 possession arrests in 2015, what are we to expect in the year leading to legalization? More arrests? More criminal records? Trudeau owes Canadians an apology for a long and damaging legacy of marijuana prohibition. Legalization does not just mean restricting access, it means acknowledging and addressing the harms of disproportionate policing and owning up to the senseless use of the criminal justice system. - ------------------------------------------------------------------ Marcus A. Sibley is a PhD candidate in the Department of Law and Legal Studies at Carleton University. His research largely focuses on gendered-based violence, policing and processes of criminal regulation in Canada. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt