Pubdate: Thursday, May 6, 1999 Source: Eye, The (Canada) Contact: http://www.eye.net/ Forum: http://www.eye.net/eye/feedback/feedback.html Section: Editorial Page: 8 MIKE THE GANJA SLAYER It's not often we find ourselves more pro-cop than the premier. The basis of our newfound respect for the police is an April 21 motion by the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police in favor of "decriminalizing" marijuana possession. The chiefs would like to replace the current penalty of jail and a record with a ticket and a fine. A few days later, the RCMP announced they too support decrim. By decriminalizing, Canada would join the 11 U.S. states and several European countries that have already reduced pot penalties to the level of non-criminal offences. Mike Harris, however, says he'll fight any move toward decrim. Attention, Mike: all drug laws are federal in Canada, which means there isn't much you can do if the Liberals decide to adopt the police chiefs' recommendation. It's safe to say Harris hasn't thought the issue through. First, he admits to having no personal experience with pot; unlike Liberal leader Dalton McGuinty and NDP leader Howard Hampton, Harris has never smoked up. Then he smugly announces he "preferred booze" as a young man. We hope this doesn't send the wrong message to kids, because alcohol costs our health care system a lot more than cannabis does. According to the Addiction Research Foundation, alcohol costs health care nearly half-a-billion bucks a year. Tobacco's price tag is double that. And marijuana? It drains a mere $8 million from provincial health care each year. The Institute of Medicine in the United States recently issued a report refuting prohibitionist claims against pot. To wit, marijuana generally doesn't drive you insane, doesn't lead to hard drugs and doesn't cause violent crime. A judge in Toronto came to the same conclusions in 1997 when he threw out a case against an epileptic medical marijuana user named Terry Parker, now Canada's only legal toker. Harris feels obliged to oppose decrim because he's riding into an election on a law-and-order platform. Evidently being smart on crime doesn't enter the equation. If Harris is going to ignore the police -- and the majority of Canadians who now, according to opinion polls, support decrim -- he might want to listen to what other Conservatives say about pot. Back in the late '70s, Joe Clark promised a Tory government would decriminalize marijuana. Last year, Reform MP Jim Hart launched a private member's bill to legalize medical pot. Last month, fellow Reformer Keith Martin, who happens to be a doctor, introduced a private member's bill to decriminalize possession for all use. Like the Canadian Association of Police Chiefs, Doc Martin thinks pot prohibition is a waste of time. "I would like to see our police officers pursuing rapists and organized crime barons, not people for simple possession," Martin told reporters. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea