Pubdate: Fri, 17 Nov 2017 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2017 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Allan Woods Page: A10 QUEBEC TO KEEP STRICT CONTROLS OVER MARIJUANA Provincial legislation calls for government-run stores, zero tolerance for DUIs MONTREAL- The rollout of legislation governing the legal marijuana regime in Quebec was likely a downer for pot enthusiasts in a province widely known for its European sensibilities and liberal mores. To call it a buzzkill would set bloodshot eyes rolling, but the Quebec government unveiled plans to create what is likely to be one of the most restrictive regimes so far in the country. In introducing the legislation to reporters, even Public Health Minister Lucie Charlebois admitted that the province was dragged out of the prohibition era much too quickly by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's Liberal government. "Do I like drugs? No . . . But are they there? As Minister of Public Health do I have to act? Yes," Charlebois said. Like Ontario and New Brunswick, Quebec plans to manage retail and online sales of cannabis through a subsidiary of the provincial liquor board when pot is legalized in July 2018. Manitoba and Alberta, in contrast, both plan to allow private retailers to seek licences to sell marijuana out of their stores. Quebec also plans to exceed Ontario's proposed escalating monetary penalties for drug-impaired driving by instituting a zero-tolerance approach for all drivers found through roadside saliva tests to have consumed pot. And while the federal bill to legalize marijuana envisions allowing adults to grow up to four plants for personal use, so long as they do not exceed 100 centimetres, Quebec wants to ban anyone from growing their own pot. "It constitutes a nightmare of enforcement," Quebec Finance Minister Carlos Leitao said. "One plant? Two plants? How big? How small? Which apartment? Which house? Are you a renter or a homeowner?" He predicted that other provinces trying to adhere to and enforce the laws around plants for personal consumption will find it to be "quite problematic." In addition to these measures, the province is setting up a $25-million fund that will use the revenues from marijuana sales to pay for studies into the public health effects, harm prevention activities, treatment and education about drug use. "The experts recommended that we be very careful at the beginning and to adjust later if there is a need," Charlebois said, when asked about the restrictive nature of the law, which nonetheless sets the minimum age for marijuana consumption at 18. The province also wants strict prohibitions on advertising and promotion of cannabis. With that in mind, retail stores will be neither overly inviting to consumers without being disagreeable. "It's a reality that exists. What we want to do is take people out of the illegal market and bring them in to the legal market so they can have information and access to the products and we can explain it to them," Charlebois said. The legislation envisions criminal background checks and security clearances for retail pot sellers whose job is to counsel customers on the varieties and strains of the drug while warning about the potential effects of cannabis use. "They won't be trained to boost sales," Charlebois said. "We're not growing the economy of Quebec with cannabis sales." Leitao said provincial finance ministers would be talking about the taxation of cannabis products and revenue sharing at a meeting next month in Ottawa. "The objective here is not to generate a bundle or a gazillion dollars of revenue that is going to settle all our social problems," he said. "The objective here is to drive out the illegal market. In order to drive out the illegal market . . . we need to have a realistic price. And to have a realistic price we need to have a realistic level of taxation." The Trudeau government has proposed a 50-50 split of tax revenues between the federal government and the provinces. Most provinces want more of the money, saying that much of the burden that comes with legal marijuana will fall to them. Leitao said he expected a final decision on marijuana taxation by February or March of 2018. "By July1, like it or not, this stuff will go on sale. We need to have what the price is and a good idea of what the taxation is." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt