Pubdate: Tue, 25 Jul 2017 Source: Chronicle Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2017 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://www.herald.ns.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 PEACEABLE PREMIERS GETTING TOUGH ON POT If last week's meeting of provincial premiers is any indication, the issue that most unites Canadian provinces in the summer of 2017 is the timing of the introduction of legalized marijuana. Canadians should be forgiven for thinking that the premiers face more daunting and serious problems - starting with the state of provincial health care systems. A study by the New York-based Commonwealth Fund concludes Canada's health care system ranks in the bottom three in a group of 11 wealthy countries. Yet all our premiers could come up with following the annual summer meeting of the Council of the Federation was a pledge to get tough - maybe - with the federal government over the introduction of legalized pot. The Trudeau government wants the new marijuana laws in place by July 1, 2018. The premiers decided last week that they will ask Ottawa to delay implementation of those laws if certain issues are not addressed by November of this year. In fairness to the premiers, the issues they identified - road safety, taxation, training for distributors and public education - are serious enough. The new federal laws also place a substantial public policy and administrative burden on the provinces, which will be charged with managing the distribution and delivery streams for both medicinal and recreational marijuana. The wrap-up press conference at the Edmonton meeting left the impression that the premiers wanted to show some courage in their criticism of the federal government's marijuana policy - but not too much. This is a reflection of some stark political realities. One: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is too popular to attack for many premiers, particularly his Liberal peers in the nation's six easternmost provinces. Two: Important national issues (including equalization and federal health care funding) divide the premiers instead of uniting them. Western premiers are perennially critical of equalization payments to "have-not" provinces like Nova Scotia. And Atlantic premiers generally dislike per capita health care transfers that favour (Western) provinces with younger and healthier populations. All that said, the premiers should have shown enough gumption to at least start talking about the issue that most concerns Canadians - quality health care services. The Commonwealth Fund health care report on 11 wealthy countries concludes that Canada is letting its citizens down when it comes to wait times for emergency care, the availability of after-hour care, and the delivery of services like dental care that are routinely covered by public plans in nations that spend less public money achieving better health outcomes. Given that Canadians see state-delivered health care as a defining triumph of nationhood, the premiers should show more interest in addressing chronic problems in the system. Instead, they chose last week to quibble over the timing of the introduction of new pot laws. Voters deserve better from their provincial leaders. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt