HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Legalized Pot Means More Enforcement
Pubdate: Fri, 24 Feb 2006
Source: Province, The (CN BC)
Copyright: 2006 The Province
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/theprovince/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476
Author: Don Harrison
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

LEGALIZED POT MEANS MORE ENFORCEMENT

Advocates of decriminalization or legalization of marijuana are 
hallucinating if they think their vision would mean less law 
enforcement, says renowned cannabis and psychosis expert Dr. David Fergusson.

"If you think about tobacco and alcohol, there are huge regulatory 
behaviours and procedures that need to be put in place," the New 
Zealand professor told a cannabis and mental-health seminar at Simon 
Fraser University Harbourside yesterday.

Fegusson said a cannabis-legalization framework would have to deal 
with a way to ensure product quality, advertising regulations, 
package warnings/labeling, under-age prohibitions like those on 
tobacco and alcohol, impaired driving/boating/flying standards, 
smoking-in-public rules, criminal-code punishments, designated 
growing and retail outlets and control of products entering Canada.

Increased research budgets would be needed to study long-term mental 
and physical effects, as well as more health-care capacity to treat 
psychosis or lung-damage cases, he said.

Fergusson said there is a clear connection between heavy marijuana 
use -- at least one joint per day -- and psychosis. "We estimate if 
all cannabis use was eliminated, probably in the region of 10 per 
cent of psychosis cases would disappear," he said.

Benedikt Fischer, incoming head of an illicit-drug policy and 
public-health unit at the University of Victoria, said the doubling 
of Canada's marijuana users in the past 20 years shows the current 
approach is "not very effective."
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