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41 CN NF: Brave New Work WorldMon, 15 May 2017
Source:Telegram, The (CN NF) Author:Whiffen, Glen Area:Newfoundland Lines:134 Added:05/16/2017

Knowing more about impairment key to setting fair and safe workplace rules: expert

Alex Boucher says the looming legalization of marijuana is opening up a whole new frontier for employers.

He's an expert in wellness areas, including disability management and workplace accommodation, and works with employers, unions and communities.

He acknowledged that medical marijuana use has posed challenges in the workplace, and that legalized pot will add an extra level of challenge for employers wanting to be fair and yet ensure the workplace is safe.

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42 CN NF: No Place At Work For Recreational Pot: ExpertSat, 13 May 2017
Source:Telegram, The (CN NF) Author:Whiffen, Glen Area:Newfoundland Lines:80 Added:05/15/2017

Expert says employers should treat recreational marijuana the same as alcohol - it's a no-no at work

St. John's lawyer Harold Smith of Stewart McKelvey represents employers in all aspects of labour relations, employment and administration law, and as such has been helping employers adjust their policies to incorporate the legalization of marijuana.

He addressed a recent presentation of the Canadian Pension and Benefits Institute, Atlantic Region, in St. John's, titled "Marijuana in the Workplace" for employers.

"The message I was trying to bring to the group from a legal perspective is you treat (marijuana) no different than alcohol," Smith said. "You would ban recreational use of marijuana or cannabis on the property as you ban alcohol. So an employer, you ban it. You say you 'shall not, must not, and cannot have cannabis, like alcohol, on our site.'"

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43 CN NF: Through The CracksFri, 12 May 2017
Source:Telegram, The (CN NF) Author:Whiffen, Glen Area:Newfoundland Lines:119 Added:05/15/2017

Torbay man's job is in limbo as workplaces wrestle with marijuana policies

Scott Tizzard has been wrestling with a two-pronged dilemma for the past seven months.

And like the north poles of two magnets trying to meet, they repel each other in his mind.

The first is his fight for his legal right to medical marijuana - the only thing that works to ease the chronic pain from his diagnosed osteoarthritis after trying a long list of medications his doctors have prescribed over the years.

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44 CN NF: Column: Pot Plant Plan PostponedFri, 21 Apr 2017
Source:Telegram, The (CN NF) Author:Jones, Brian Area:Newfoundland Lines:91 Added:04/25/2017

It will be Russian giants again this summer. No, not Vladimir Putin. Russian giant sunflowers, which the seed package promises can grow up to eight feet high. We plant them every year for fun, and built a two foot by eight foot flower box especially for them, so we can have a veritable field of rising Russkies. (Tip: put the seeds in the dirt in late May, and you'll yield a swath of yellow by early September.)

This year, the Russian giants were to be supplanted by marijuana plants. Again, just for fun.

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45 CN NF: Consulting On CannabisThu, 13 Apr 2017
Source:Telegram, The (CN NF) Author:McLeod, James Area:Newfoundland Lines:62 Added:04/15/2017

Parsons promises public consultation soon on legal marijuana

The government will start public consultations within the next month or two on how to implement marijuana legalization in Newfoundland and Labrador, Justice Minister Andrew Parsons said.

On Thursday, the federal government will unveil the legislation for legalization of marijuana use, which will set out the overall framework for how things will work.

But according to a news report by the CBC, important aspects of the new marijuana system will be up to provincial discretion - the age that you can legally buy the drug, how it's distributed and what the retail price will be.

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46 CN NF: Editorial: High TimesMon, 10 Apr 2017
Source:Gulf News, The (CN NF)          Area:Newfoundland Lines:73 Added:04/13/2017

It was a bold statement: "We will legalize, regulate and restrict access to marijuana." The 2015 federal Liberal election promise caught Canadians' attention and attracted the votes of many who supported the long-overdue legalization of marijuana.

Many people believe that smoking a joint is no worse than having a beer. Plenty of Canadians - even prime ministers - have tried it. Polls indicate most people want legalization. Medical marijuana use has smoothed the drug's acceptance.

The government is finally ready to table legislation to legalize marijuana by July 1, 2018. But why the wait? Do we really have to wait another 18 months for proclamation, when 60,000 Canadians are convicted each year for simple possession or personal use?

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47 CN NF: Prescription Or Proscription?Wed, 05 Apr 2017
Source:Telegram, The (CN NF) Author:Whiffen, Glen Area:Newfoundland Lines:195 Added:04/08/2017

Worker claims companies refusing him jobs because of medical marijuana prescription

Scott Tizzard of Torbay says he is being discriminated against by companies he should have been working for over the past several months. The Reason? Taking his doctor-prescribed medical marijuana.

Tizzard has worked construction in the province for 30 years, going from big project to big project wherever the work has taken him, and wherever dispatched by his union.

Described by co-workers as a hard worker, for many of those years he'd worked long-hour days battling the pain and discomfort of Crohn's disease and osteoarthritis.

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48 CN NF: Editorial: High TimesThu, 06 Apr 2017
Source:Advertiser (CN NF)          Area:Newfoundland Lines:73 Added:04/06/2017

It was a bold statement: "We will legalize, regulate and restrict access to marijuana." The 2015 federal Liberal election promise caught Canadians' attention and attracted the votes of many who supported the long-overdue legalization of marijuana.

Many people believe that smoking a joint is no worse than having a beer. Plenty of Canadians - even prime ministers - have tried it. Polls indicate most people want legalization. Medical marijuana use has smoothed the drug's acceptance.

The government is finally ready to table legislation to legalize marijuana by July 1, 2018. But why the wait? Do we really have to wait another 18 months for proclamation, when 60,000 Canadians are convicted each year for simple possession or personal use?

[continues 363 words]

49 CN NF: Editorial: High TimeFri, 31 Mar 2017
Source:Western Star, The (CN NF)          Area:Newfoundland Lines:73 Added:04/04/2017

It was a bold statement: "We will legalize, regulate and restrict access to marijuana." The 2015 federal Liberal election promise caught Canadians' attention and attracted the votes of many who supported the long-overdue legalization of marijuana.

Many people believe that smoking a joint is no worse than having a beer. Plenty of Canadians - even prime ministers - have tried it. Polls indicate most people want legalization. Medical marijuana use has smoothed the drug's acceptance.

The government is finally ready to table legislation to legalize marijuana by July 1, 2018. But why the wait? Do we really have to wait another 18 months for proclamation, when 60,000 Canadians are convicted each year for simple possession or personal use?

[continues 363 words]

50 CN NF: Column: Smokes, Booze And Legalized DopeSat, 01 Apr 2017
Source:Telegram, The (CN NF) Author:Wakeham, Bob Area:Newfoundland Lines:113 Added:04/01/2017

So, we smoke like tilts and drink like fish - Canadian champions on both counts (it's not only with brooms and rocks where we excel), the No. 1 nicotine inhalers and boozers in the country, according to stories that appeared side by side (appropriately enough) in The Telegram last week.

And with marijuana set to be legalized by July 1, 2018, as we were told the other day, Newfoundlanders, if our history with smokes and liquor is any indication, can probably be counted on to eventually toke up more than any other Canadians.

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51 CN NF: Few Details From Province About How Legal Weed Will WorkWed, 29 Mar 2017
Source:Telegram, The (CN NF) Author:McLeod, James Area:Newfoundland Lines:66 Added:03/29/2017

"I'd like to think there'll be consultation among the different stakeholders and people that have an interest in this, but again, that's a cabinet decision and a premier's decision." Justice Minister Andrew Parsons

Federal MP Bill Blair confirmed to reporters Tuesday that Ottawa is aiming to make marijuana legal for recreational use by July 2018, although he was at pains to downplay any sense that it might be fun.

In nearly every question about marijuana, Blair talked about how the government's legalization effort is all about "strict regulation" and control in order to keep the drug out of the hands of kids, and the profits out of the hands of organized crime.

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52 CN NF: Pot Activist's Visit Prompts Police WarningSat, 25 Mar 2017
Source:Telegram, The (CN NF) Author:Mullaley, Rosie Area:Newfoundland Lines:74 Added:03/25/2017

Dana Larsen, the British Columbia man who calls himself a cannabis crusader, will be in St. John's this weekend spreading his message of cannabis freedom as part of his cross-country campaign.

But the police officer heading this province's drug unit is warning the public to be leery of what Larsen has to say.

RNC Supt. Marlene Jesso is concerned Larsen may send the wrong message to people when it comes to the legalization of marijuana.

"It's not against the law for him to come down here and speak to people," said Jesso, who is in charge of the Newfoundland and Labrador combined forces special enforcement unit, a joint RCMP-RNC team.

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53 CN NF: Informants Used Properly By Police In Drug Case: JudgeWed, 22 Mar 2017
Source:Telegram, The (CN NF) Author:, Area:Newfoundland Lines:133 Added:03/22/2017

A recent Newfoundland and Labrador Supreme Court decision tested the weight the justice system places on confidential police informants.

The case revolved around a British Columbia man arrested and charged in Newfoundland with drug-related offences in February 2015.

The accused applied to the court to have certain police evidence excluded from his case - particularly the police informant information - - stating that his rights under Section 9 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms were breached. He claimed police did not have reasonable grounds to make the arrest nor search his vehicle.

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54 CN NF: LTE: Budget 2017 Must Cut Crime, Not JusticeFri, 03 Mar 2017
Source:Western Star, The (CN NF) Author:Drover, Devin Area:Newfoundland Lines:65 Added:03/06/2017

It is evident by recent cuts to our public sector that the provincial government's commitment to austerity measures will undoubtedly continue through the upcoming spring budget.

However, as the rise of violent crime and introduction of dangerous new drugs to our province risks tearing apart our families and communities, it remains clear that we cannot afford further cuts to justice and public safety initiatives within our province.

Appealing to relevant statistics about drug use and crime in our province brings only heartwrenching conclusions. Drug-related deaths within Newfoundland and Labrador increased 42 per cent from 2014 to 2015. Fentanyl, an extremely dangerous street drug, has been the subject of a recent public warning by the RCMP after the fatal opioid was spotted on the Burin Peninsula. Furthermore, this warning comes merely a month after a St. John's drug bust seized over 250 fentanyl pills that were manufactured to appear like OxyContin, an often abused prescription painkiller.

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55 CN NF: Education Is Key Says RCMP OfficerThu, 16 Feb 2017
Source:Packet, The (CN NF) Author:Farrell, Colin Area:Newfoundland Lines:124 Added:02/21/2017

If there was ever a time that people needed to talk to their kids about drugs it would be now.

The importance of education and communication were the key topics brought up during an information session on the drug fentanyl held at The Merge on Feb. 9.

Staff Sgt. Dale Foote, of the Burin Peninsula detachment of the RCMP, was one of the invited speakers for the evening.

"Everyone thinks that the overdose at the hospital is going to be the individual that is addicted to drugs, that's not (always) that case," said Foote during his presentation.

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56 CN NF: Education Is Key, Says RCMP OfficerTue, 14 Feb 2017
Source:Southern Gazette, The (CN NF) Author:Farrell, Colin Area:Newfoundland Lines:59 Added:02/14/2017

The Merge hosts fentanyl information session

If there was ever a time that people needed to talk to their kids about drugs, it would be now.

The importance of education and communication were the key topics brought up during an information session on the drug fentanyl held at The Merge on Feb. 9.

Staff Sgt. Dale Foote, of the Burin Peninsula detachment of the RCMP, was one of the invited speakers for the evening.

"Everyone thinks that the overdose at the hospital is going to be the individual that is addicted to drugs, that's not (always) that case," said Foote during his presentation. "We're living in a time right now where the types of drugs people are using are lethal if they're inhaled by anybody, they're lethal if some one comes in contact with them - that's very important for our teenagers to know."

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57 CN NF: Deadly Drug Wave AheadMon, 30 Jan 2017
Source:Telegram, The (CN NF) Author:Bradbury, Tara Area:Newfoundland Lines:140 Added:02/04/2017

Get ready for the worst, intervention counsellor warns province

Andy Bhatti has spent the majority of his life surrounded by hard drugs.

As an interventionist, he can talk to you eloquently about the dangers of drug use, quote Canadian statistics, and offer his ideas about what programs and services are needed in order to help drug users and stop overdoses.

He can just as easily slip into the language of a drug user, calling drugs by their slang names, giving you a list of his acquaintances who have died, and talking like living in stolen cars and dirty motels while committing crimes in order to support an expensive addiction is a regular fact of life.

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58 CN NF: Letter: Weed - After It's LegalMon, 16 Jan 2017
Source:Labradorian, The (CN NF) Author:Wells, Andy Area:Newfoundland Lines:81 Added:01/18/2017

What can we expect with the legalization of marijuana?

Proponents argue that legalization will reduce crime, lower criminal justice costs, improve public health, improve traffic safety and stimulate the economy. Opponents argue that legalization will spur marijuana and other drug and alcohol use, increase crime, diminish public safety and lower educational achievement.

There is research available with some interesting results, but the most important point to be made is that at this stage research must be considered preliminary, since there has been insufficient time for conclusive evaluation and predictive results.

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59 CN NF: PUB LTE: Weed - After It's LegalFri, 06 Jan 2017
Source:Telegram, The (CN NF) Author:Wells, Andy Area:Newfoundland Lines:84 Added:01/07/2017

Part 3 in an occasional letter series exploring marijuana use and legalization

What can we expect with the legalization of marijuana?

Proponents argue that legalization will reduce crime, lower criminal justice costs, improve public health, improve traffic safety and stimulate the economy. Opponents argue that legalization will spur marijuana and other drug and alcohol use, increase crime, diminish public safety and lower educational achievement.

There is research available with some interesting results, but the most important point to be made is that at this stage research must be considered preliminary, since there has been insufficient time for conclusive evaluation and predictive results.

[continues 448 words]

60 CN NF: PUB LTE: A war on people: Lessons Of ProhibitionFri, 30 Dec 2016
Source:Telegram, The (CN NF) Author:Wells, Andy Area:Newfoundland Lines:84 Added:12/31/2016

Part 2 in an occasional letter series exploring marijuana use and legalization

By the end of the 19th century, the Temperance Movement and the Progressive Era had acquired considerable political strength based on a simple but fallacious idea: that the human condition can be improved through vigorous and persuasive government involvement in the economy, and society generally.

The First World War saw a major expansion of government activity that did not diminish significantly with the end of the war. In 1919, the United States Congress passed the Volstead Act, which led to the Prohibition Era in the U.S. (which would not end until 1933). Marijuana and drug prohibitions increased in many jurisdictions and the war against marijuana was given a major boost with the film "Reefer Madness," which hit screens in 1936.

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