Pubdate: Tue, 04 May 2010 Source: Nelson Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Nelson Daily News Contact: http://www.nelsondailynews.com/section/nelson0303&template=letter Website: http://www.nelsondailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/288 Author: Colin Payne Note: See more photos from this event in our web gallery at: http://mapinc.org/url/qAATVRSy Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) POT PARADE MARCHES THROUGH NELSON THE WEED CRUSADE: Local marijuana advocates take to the Heritage City streets on Sunday, spreading the word about legalization Nelson resident, Sarah Bergeron finds relief from her rheumatoid arthritis pain by using an herb. The only problem is that herb is illegal to grow, possess and sell. That's why she organized Nelson's first annual Marijuana March that saw about 50 local marijuana legalization activists parade down Baker Street and Vernon Street to City Hall on Sunday. Bergeron grew up around parents who smoked marijuana for relief from illness. "My dad has epilepsy, that's why he uses it," she said. "My mom has a lot of knee pain and thyroid problems and she uses marijuana too. But neither of them are on the government status. "I myself just realized about three and a half years ago that I have rheumatoid arthritis. It's really bad. My knee gets all swelled up." Until then, Bergeron had only used marijuana recreationally. But once the pain began, she started looking into the drug for its medicinal purposes. "I started to use it all the time and realized the benefit," she said. "I got a little further into the ways to make me not so 'sleepy' like a typical recreational user. I didn't want to be a stoner. I wanted to get deep into the facts of medicinal use and how good it really is for us. "That helped me uncover how wrong the laws [around marijuana] are because me, my mom and dad and so many other people I know aren't criminals. We shouldn't have two years in jail if we have some plants because we're growing for ourselves in our house." Bergeron said she hoped the march would help send a message to younger people that marijuana prohibition is an unjust law. As they marched through town on Sunday shouting 'free the weed,' bearing signs reading 'No Prison for Pot' and 'Free the Holy Smoke Four,' Nelsonites joined marijuana advocates from across the country and in 300 cities around the world in protest of pot prohibition. On that same day the Canadian federal government announced it would be sending its tough-on-crime legislation back to the Senate, which could see mandatory minimum sentences of six months for anyone caught growing as few as five marijuana plants. It's a bill the Conservative government has been trying unsuccessfully to make into law since 2007, but with the balance of the Senate tipped toward the Conservatives now, the bill will likely become law in the near future. But still they smoked pot openly in front of Nelson City Hall on Sunday without a police officer in sight. Bergeron feels the new law, if enacted, will do little to decrease crime in Canada. "It just creates way more crime, and I believe they [the government] know it," she said. "They make money off of private prisons and all those people jailed for non-violent crimes are fairly easy prisoners to deal with. "I'm absolutely disgusted with these new laws. It's just younger people getting put in jail more often and getting put into gang violence." Nelson Police Department chief, Dan Maluta said he did not want to weigh in to the marijuana legalization debate or comment on the potential impacts of the new federal law. Maluta did say that local police were not even aware that the event was taking place and that it was essentially a "non event" from his perspective. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom