Pubdate: Tue, 25 Apr 2017 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2017 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/wEtbT4yU Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Sunny Freeman Page: FP1 MARIJUANA TASK FORCE HEAD SEES ROLE FOR BLACK MARKET PRODUCERS TORONTO * Black market marijuana growers should be included in the legal market as they can provide valuable expertise as it evolves, says the chair of the federal government's task force on legalization. Anne McLellan said Monday that Ottawa's Task Force on Cannabis Legalization and Regulation, whose recommendations were broadly adopted in the government's proposed Cannabis Act, concluded that previous criminal convictions during marijuana's century of prohibition "shouldn't be an automatic bar to them coming into the legal system." "We didn't want all those people excluded automatically from the possibility of participating in some way," McLellan, now a senior advisor at Bennett Jones LLP, said in an interview on the sidelines of a conference on cannabis regulation organized by the Ryerson University in Toronto. The task force's November report called on the federal government to set up a system that allows various-sized producers to participate, including independent and craft growers. "There are lots of people who are producing now illegally - we talk about artisanal and craft producers - we want a diversity of producers," McLellan said. "There's an awful lot of expertise that's outside the legal system right now and you wouldn't want to lose all that." Some Canadian pot activists, including Marc and Jodie Emery, have expressed their disappointment that the draft legislation sets up a system that favours "big marijuana" because the federal government will strictly regulate and license who can produce the plant for sale. Under the current medical marijuana regime, Ottawa has handed out some 40 licences to produce, a small fraction of the number of applicants. However, McLellan points out that producing, manufacturing or selling pot are not the only economic opportunities in the coming multi-billion dollar legal marijuana market. "There are other ways for people to be involved in this industry. People focus on production or manufacturing, retail, and that's all important, but that's only the most visible part," she said. "A lot is going to happen here and there are so many access points for people to be involved." There are also a plethora of weed-related businesses - from fertilizers to security services to payment processors - carving niches in the space ahead of legalization expected in July 2018. McLellan said the task force was not mandated to examine the question of whether to grant amnesty to those convicted of marijuana offences, even though that had been part of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's previous platform on ending the prohibition. Ultimately, McLellan told a panel at the Ryerson University, the decision on the degree to which black market operators can participate is up to the federal government. "There are people on the activist side who are disappointed. But I think they should celebrate what has happened to date and work with everybody in this space," she said. "But people have to understand that legalization was never going to happen without regulation because we do not sell product to consumers without consumers having the basic information to know whether it's safe." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt