Pubdate: Thu, 16 Oct 1997 Source: Now Magazine ] Date: October 16, 1997 Contact: Author: Ali Sharrif Pot Law Wrong, Grit Leader Says By Ali Sharrif As the government war against cannabis continues to intensify, Dalton McGuinty, the leader of the Ontario Liberal party, believes it's time pot was decriminalized. He says the current situation, where marijuana offenders are slapped with penalties that give them permanent records, leads to too many ruined lives. "In many cases, particularly in smaller communities where judges tend to view this offence differently, you get a record and it makes it tough on young people who made a mistake," he says in an interview. "It is hard enough for young people today without having to contend with a criminal record. "I suggested that maybe one of the things that the federal government ought to be looking at is decriminalizing not legalizing simple possession so that it would become a provincial offence." Figures show that the law continues to snare an everincreasing number of marijuana smokers. Since 1994, arrests in marijuana offences have gone up for two consecutive years. The last figures available from the Canadian Centre for Justice statistics (CCFJS) show 29,562 adults were arrested in 1996, 28,380 in 1995 and 27,662 in 1994 for marijuana offences. The majority of arrests, about 75 per cent, are for possession. "It might be that (either) drug enforcement or consumption has increased," says John Turner, media spokesperson for CCFJS. Despite growing public sentiment for decriminalization, the federal government isn't about to change the tough Bill C8, the beefedup antidrug law that came into force earlier this year.