Pubdate: Mon, 02 Nov 1998 Source: The Varsity (A University of Toronto Student paper) Website: http://www.campuslife.utoronto.ca/groups/varsity/ Contact: Jamie Woods BC SKUNK WEED LANDS PROF IN TROUBLE VANCOUVER (CUP) A University of Victoria sociology professor who specializes in the family's role in society, has pleaded guilty to cultivating and possessing marijuana for the purpose of trafficking. During a raid on the home of Jean Veevers last Tuesday, police found 122 marijuana plants and 8.6 kilograms of marijuana. The University of Victoria says it will wait until Veevers is sentenced before deciding on any disciplinary action. "I guess we'll just have to wait and see what happens," said Patty Pitts, a university information officer. "There's no cut and dried policy for this kind of thing." Veevers, who has been a faculty member at the University of Victoria since 1980, is slated to teach a third-year course on the family and society starting January 1999. This may be the first time a pot-cultivating professor has been discovered in the country, according to Neil Boyd, a criminology professor at Simon Fraser University (SFU). Boyd says that Veevers wouldn't be the only professor in Canada with a criminal record, even though the cultivation for the purpose of trafficking is most unique. "Certainly there are faculty in Canadian universities who teach with criminal records, and there are faculty who have received convictions for things like impaired driving," he said. But Mel Hunt, Veevers' legal counsel, has asked the court to consider an electronic monitoring sentence, whereby Veevers would be effectively tracked via a device physically attached to him. On November 27th, Veevers is expected to appear before the British Columbia Supreme Court to receive his sentence. Last year, CNN reported rough estimates that the indoor marijuana growth industry in British Columbia was then valued at hundreds of millions of dollars per year, possibly billions. "Nowhere is the boom greater than British Columbia," reported Larry LaMotte, a senior correspondent for CNN Impact. Since then, the debate in Canada over marijuana's legitimacy for medical usage has made headlines with at least four cases of Canadians involved in legal challenges over medical usage of marijuana in Saskatoon, Alberta and Ontario. In Toronto, AIDS activist Jim Wakeford recently launched a publicity campaign to expose the difficulties he's having in securing legal permission to use marijuana for medicinal purposes. The Federal Ministry of Health told Wakeford that cocaine and heroin are drugs that have been rubber-stamped in the past as controlled substances for terminally ill patients. At the same time, the ministry also stipulated that marijuana was off limits. "It is only recently that marijuana in Western science is known for its medical use," said Diane Riley, representing the Canadian Foundation for Drug Policy (CFDP). "Before, it had no medical use as far as the government's concern because it hasn't been approved medically." Riley adds that while heroin and cocaine were approved for pain relief in the 70's, marijuana has remained unnoticed. The drug policy foundation has been fighting for years to bring about the de-criminalization of marijuana and other drugs they deem as soft. But Bonnie Fox-McIntyre, a spokesperson for Federal Minister of Health Allan Rock, says that the procedures within Health Canada prohibit any such permission to be granted because there has never been a federal clinical test weighing the benefits of the drug. "There is no scientific data that supports the medical use of marijuana," she said, adding that the ministry would be happy to accept applications to conduct a clinical trial. But Riley says the time for de-criminalization is now. "Now there's more public sentiment and more people are in favour of de-criminalization. It will start with lack of enforcement or minor penalties. The same steps were taken in Australia and the Netherlands, where the final stages of de-criminalization have been achieved," said Riley. And according to the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws in the United States, one arrest related to the possession of marijuana occurs every 49 seconds. With files from Carla Tonelli - ---