Pubdate: Fri, 13 Dec 2002
Source: Halifax Herald (CN NS)
Copyright: 2002 The Halifax Herald Limited
Contact:  http://www.herald.ns.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180
Author: Bruce Cheadle, The Canadian Press

DECRIMINALIZE SMALL AMOUNTS OF POT: MPS

Recommendation for lenience would not apply to hashish

Ottawa - Current penalties for pot possession are too stiff, a 
parliamentary committee said Thursday, in recommending fines rather than 
criminal convictions for possessing small amounts.

"Smoking any amount of marijuana is unhealthy, but the consequences of 
conviction for a small amount of marijuana for personal use are 
disproportionate to the potential harm," said Liberal MP Paddy Torsney, 
chair of the committee.

Possession of up to 30 grams of marijuana should be treated as a regulatory 
offence and not land someone a criminal record, the special parliamentary 
committee on the non-medicinal use of drugs recommended.

Critics, both in Canada and the United States, were quick to jump on the 
recommendations.

But the report got a favourable response from Justice Minister Martin 
Cauchon, who has promised to ease marijuana possession laws early in the 
new year.

Cauchon thanked the committee Thursday for its "very interesting, very 
important" recommendations.

"Let me be clear here," he added. "What we're talking about is 
decriminalization. We're not talking about to legalize."

Canadian police and the U.S. drug control czar said easing the penalties is 
a step in the wrong direction.

"The message this sends to our youth is that we are trivializing the use of 
marijuana," said Mike Niebudek, vice-president of the Canadian Police 
Association.

And John Walters, director of the U.S. office of drug control policy, held 
a news conference in Buffalo where he warned that softer drug policies in 
Canada could create border security problems and contribute to an increased 
flow of Canadian-grown pot to the U.S. market.

Walters warned of lax attitudes "left over from the Cheech and Chong years 
of the '60s," and cautioned against "reefer-madness madness."

The Commons committee was clear, however, that pot should not be legalized. 
And it excluded hashish and other cannabis-based products from the 30-gram 
leniency provision.

But for small amounts of pot - including plants cultivated at home - "fines 
would be paid without a court appearance and enforcement would not result 
in a criminal conviction," said Torsney.

The committee report, which was not unanimously endorsed, also maintains 
that trafficking in any amount of marijuana remain a crime, a point Cauchon 
stressed in an attempt to allay U.S. concerns.

"What we would like to do is be even tougher on those involved in organized 
crime and smuggling drugs and trafficking," he said.

The idea of permitting smokers to grow their own would reduce the demand 
for dangerous grow operations, said Torsney.

"We would prefer that you have your (own) one plant if you're a Saturday 
night smoker."

The report also calls for:

- - Government prevention and education programs, especially for young people.

- - A renewed national drug strategy and a federal drug commissioner to 
oversee it and report annually to Parliament.

- - A stronger emphasis on stopping drug-impaired drivers.

- - $3 million in federal funding each year for the Canadian Centre on 
Substance Abuse.

The committee did not propose an amnesty for people with records for 
previous possession convictions. An estimated 600,000 Canadians have 
criminal records for possession of cannabis.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens