Pubdate: Sat, 23 Dec 2017 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2017 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Authors: Jenna Valleriani and Abi Roach Page: A12 HERE'S WHY WE NEED PUBLIC SPACES WHERE PEOPLE CAN USE MARIJUANA Licensing vapour lounges would enhance safety, say Jenna Valleriani and Abi Roach. If you've been following the plans for cannabis legalization across Canada, one of the key concerns is not just how it will be sold, but where exactly people will be allowed to consume cannabis. Not in parks, or in the streets, certainly not in restaurants or even in places where there are existing tobacco allowances. In Ontario, the proposed legislation boils down to this: The only place we can consume legal cannabis will be in the privacy of our homes. While the Ontario government has not shut the door on safe cannabis consumption spaces, more commonly referred to as vapour lounges, they also have indicated no real movement on the issue, at least for now. While coming at this issue from different experiences - one of us has owned a cannabis lounge for 15 years in downtown Toronto, and the other researches cannabis policy - we do agree that the exclusion of any allowable spaces aside from one's home is not only a matter of public health, but ultimately tied to larger issues of social justice. If Ontarians are only able to consume in their homes, then what about those who rent, are under-housed or homeless, live in apartments, condos, social housing or live in a home they simply don't own? Does this include patios, balconies and backyards? Landlords, in many cases, will almost certainly prohibit indoor consumption, and condo boards and social housing regulators have been rushing to update their rules and policies around this issue, typically focused on extending restrictions to legal cannabis. This also has had important implications for legal medical cannabis patients. Additionally, what about parents, who may occasionally like to responsibly consume cannabis but have children at home? Are we really going to demand they only use cannabis inside their homes? Licensing and regulating vapour lounges should be prioritized as safe and responsible policy, creating places that adults can visit, bring their cannabis and use it safely. Rather than leaving adults to risk police-citizen contact for what will be a legal substance, we should be giving cannabis consumers a place outside of their homes to legally consume. Further, while many of us don't own our homes, the next personally owned and private space is often cars. The proposed legislations as it stands may unintentionally shift consumption into vehicles for people who can't consume the legal substance in their homes, or if they have children, don't want to consume in their homes. Places such as Colorado, one of the first states to legalize cannabis in the U.S., also grappled with this issue. Under a similar consumption restriction, one of the only places Colorado citizens in many cities could consume their cannabis was in their private residences. Denver, as just one example, saw a 471-per-cent increase in ticketing for public consumption because there was nowhere for people to use legal cannabis. Those tickets, of course, disproportionately target racialized and vulnerable populations, and also left many people with legal weed in a situation where they technically couldn't use it anywhere. Remember, cannabis lounges currently exist in pockets all across Ontario, and are used by a diverse population. They don't serve alcohol, there is no selling of cannabis (meaning individuals bring their own), there is no tobacco use, and only allow people in who are 18 or 19 years of age and older. There are important considerations around vapour lounges and their intersection in Ontario with anti-smoking legislation, particularly around worker rights, but still, we need to address this issue by leveraging the realities of other jurisdictions that have been pushed to find solutions. Legalization should include considerations for all Ontarians to safely use without risk, not just those who own their homes or don't have families. There are ways to implement sensible rules around their existence that are both socially responsible and in the best interests of the public. - -------------------------------------------------------------------- Jenna Valleriani is a recent graduate of the University of Toronto, and her research focuses on cannabis policy and emerging cannabis markets in Canada. Abi Roach is the owner of North America's longest-running vapour lounge, the Hot Box, in Toronto. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt