Pubdate: Mon, 24 Oct 2016
Source: Calgary Sun, The (CN AB)
Copyright: 2016 The Calgary Sun
Contact: http://www.calgarysun.com/letter-to-editor
Website: http://www.calgarysun.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/67
Page: 14
Referenced: http://news.nationalpost.com/features/o-cannabis

LEGAL POT: EASIER SAID THAN DONE

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has a mandate to legalize pot. He ran on
it in last year's election.

But as Postmedia's just completed, six-part series "O Cannabis"
illustrates, it's one thing to promise legalization, another to deliver it.

The biggest challenge facing the Liberals is how to regulate and tax
the sale of marijuana -- an estimated $7 billion-a-year underground
business in Canada, that could increase to $10 billion to $20 billion
with legalization.

The problem is that if the government makes legal pot too expensive,
then the black market in it will continue to thrive.

That's exactly what has happened with cigarettes -- a legal product,
which is nonetheless sold through an extensive black market across
Canada -- because of the huge price differential between legal and
illegal cigarettes.

That's of particular concern if, as Trudeau says, one of his main
reasons for legalizing marijuana is to keep it out of the hands of
children.

While Federal Health Minister Jane Philpott announced at the United
Nations on April 20 - International "Weed Day" - that the Liberals
will introduce legislation to legalize pot in the spring of 2017, many
questions remain.

What limits will it set on the potency of legal pot?

Who will be allowed to grow it beyond those already licensed to sell
medical marijuana?

Who will be allowed to sell it -- corner stores, big corporations,
government-run outlets?

Will the government warn people about the health dangers of smoking
pot, as it does for cigarettes, since pot smoke contains many of the
same carcinogens as tobacco smoke and excessive use can lead to
bronchitis, chronic coughing, wheezing, dehydration, vomiting and
other health issues?

The current lack of information about these issues has put municipal
governments and local police forces in a tough spot.

There are varying degrees of enforcement across the country of our
current laws that make marijuana illegal, including on the issue of
raiding pot dispensaries that are springing up in cities in
anticipation of legalization.

That's to say nothing of how police will enforce impaired driving
laws, given that tests to determine how much pot someone has consumed
are far less specific than those that exist for alcohol.

Canadians need answers to all of these questions -- soon.
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MAP posted-by: Matt