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Pubdate: Fri, 06 May 2005 Source: Peace Arch News (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Peace Arch News Contact: http://www.peacearchnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1333 Author: Sheila Reynolds Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) B.C. MARIJUANA PARTY SHUT OUT OF SCHOOLS B.C. Marijuana Party candidates won't be allowed to participate in all-candidates meetings at Surrey schools. Amanda Boggan, who's representing the Marijuana party in Surrey-Green Timbers, was invited to attend a political debate for students at Queen Elizabeth Secondary Wednesday. However, she was contacted by a student organizer the night before and asked not to show up. "I was a bit stunned. I've never been disinvited to anything in my life," Boggan said. "I got off the phone and felt like a bad person for a while, and then realized it was actually detrimental to the students' education about the electoral process for certain parties to be excluded." Armed with an election sign, she and Surrey-Whalley Marijuana candidate Neil Magnuson appeared at the high school at different times prior to the debate - attended by the NDP's Sue Hammell, Communist Harjit Daudaria, the Green's Roy Whyte, and Annexationist Gordon Brosseuk - only to be told to leave school property by the principal. Surrey School District's Doug Strachan said the blanket decision not to include Marijuana candidates in school debates came after a candidate at a similar meeting at Fraser Heights Secondary last week distributed articles and stickers promoting pot. He said the pro-pot candidates were initially permitted in schools to make the election process as realistic as possible for students and to show that fringe and one-issue parties exist. "At the same time, we just could not allow that sort of information concerning a substance that is still illegal to be promoted to our students," Strachan said. "We're trying to strike a balance. We can appreciate lobbying to have laws changed, and that's a legitimate point of view and certainly something our students can learn from. But we can't condone the promotion of them taking an illegal substance." Many schools are holding all-candidates meetings and mock elections as part of an Elections B.C. process called Student Vote B.C. where teens learn about elections, campaigns, and cast practice ballots the day prior to the election. Kirk Tousaw, Marijuana party campaign manager, called the exclusion of candidates an anti-democratic exercise "that teaches a very negative lesson to our youth, who are increasingly disenfranchised from our political system." Boggan wasn't surprised at the district's stance in light of a letter written to the solicitor general of Canada by trustees in May 2004 expressing concerns about potential consequences decriminalization of marijuana could have on students. "I'm not a drug addict or a dealer - I'm a parent," Boggan said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom