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Pubdate: Tue, 19 Nov 2002 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2002 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Janice Tibbetts, The Ottawa Citizen MPS DEMAND A DRUG CZAR 'We Have Nobody' To Measure Success Of War On Drugs A special parliamentary committee will recommend that Canada hire a national drug czar -- similar to that in the U.S. -- to tackle the country's multibillion-dollar problem of illegal drugs. The committee on non-medical use of drugs will also recommend that Canada relax its laws against marijuana possession and that the government sanction sites in which addicts can safely inject drugs. The recommendations are among about 30 that will be contained in a report to be released within weeks, according to committee members. The report will focus on the national drug strategy, which has been widely criticized for its poor leadership, shoddy research and lack of measurable results. "There's no 'Big Brother,' " said MP Derek Lee, a Liberal committee member. "We have no leader, we have nobody. We have no institution in the country that's been given the job of setting goals and trying to find out if we get there or not." The committee, struck a year and a half ago, began meeting privately late yesterday to put the finishing touches on its report, which it will give to Parliament in the next couple of weeks. Federal Auditor General Sheila Fraser, in a scathing report last December, reported that Canada is ill-informed on the size of its drug problem because nobody is in charge. Ms. Fraser found that illegal drugs are costing the federal government alone an estimated $5 billion annually through the harmful effects of drug use. These effects include lost productivity, property crime, law enforcement and health care. She singled out the Justice Department and the RCMP for failing to articulate what they have accomplished in pursuing drug files. While the committee report will call for a national drug co-ordinator, some members stressed they oppose Canada following the U.S.'s hardline drug policy that focuses on prohibition. Rather, the majority of the committee is expected to recommend that Canada focus more on education and drug-treatment programs, as well as set up what have become known as "safe injection sites" for drug addicts. "We must do prohibition and enforcement, but we don't want to waste money unnecessarily on prohibition and enforcement," said Mr. Lee. "We've got to better manage what is out there: the lost lives, the smuggling, the organized crime, the addictions, the dependency, the health-care risks, the urban blight, the threat in schools, the lack of knowledge of young people." The government has taken steps to address the problem. It has already established drug courts in some Canadian cities, which provide addicts with judicially supervised treatment and extensive medical and social support. In the Liberals' throne speech last month, the government said it would pursue a new national drug strategy, but provided no further details. Health Canada has also said it will allow communities to establish needle-injection sites, on a pilot-project basis, where drug addicts can go for free needles and inject drugs under professional supervision. Randy White, a Canadian Alliance member of the committee, strongly opposes the idea, denouncing the sites as "heroin-maintenance centres." NDP MP Libby Davies, however, says the report does not go far enough on the treatment side, given that the government spends 95 per cent of its resources on enforcement. The report is also expected to recommend decriminalization of marijuana possession on the grounds that the government should be devoting time and resources to more harmful drugs. Justice Minister Martin Cauchon is seriously considering decriminalization, so that offenders would receive a fine akin to a parking ticket rather than be saddled with a criminal record. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom