HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Students Told Green Party Would Legalize Marijuana
Pubdate: Tue, 07 Oct 2008
Source: Peterborough Examiner, The (CN ON)
Copyright: 2008 Osprey Media Group Inc.
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/4VLGnvUl
Website: http://www.thepeterboroughexaminer.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2616
Author: Andrea Houston

STUDENTS TOLD GREEN PARTY WOULD LEGALIZE MARIJUANA

The legalization of marijuana, funding for education and the arts 
were among the issues raised by Fleming College students at an 
all-candidates debate yesterday.

The debate, hosted by the Student Administrative Council at the 
college, welcomed Peterborough riding candidates Conservative MP Dean 
Del Mastro, Liberal Betsy McGregor, New Democrat Steve Sharpe and the 
Green party's Emily Berrigan.

The candidates answered a couple of education questions from 
moderator and SAC director Andy Glynn before fielding questions from 
some of the 150 students.

Sharpe pledged his party would establish a $1,000 grant for students 
who qualify for loans.

"If you are doing a three-year program, there's an extra $3,000 to 
reduce your overall tuition," Sharpe said. "So right from the get-go 
we are trying to make sure (education) is cheaper."

Del Mastro said more funding needs to be opened up to students 
through tax credits.

McGregor promised a $1,000 grant to assist students with housing, 
food and books.

"We need to increase access grants to not only cover tuition, but to 
cover a large percentage of the total education costs," Berrigan 
said, "to cover the cost of rent, books, child care and food."

Travel and tourism student Geoff Logan, 20, asked Del Mastro what his 
position is on cuts to arts and culture funding.

"We've actually got a tremendous record on support for the arts," Del 
Mastro said. "We have dramatically increased funding for the arts by 
more than eight per cent, more than $200 million than the previous 
government, and we have almost doubled funding for the Canada Council."

McGregor was quick to ask Glynn for a rebuttal to dispute Del Mastro's claims.

"The eight per cent that is referred to by the current member is 
eight per cent to Heritage Canada," McGregor said. "If you drill down 
below there you will find there is a serious $42-million cut to the arts.

"It is an absolute outrage," she said. "We depend on the (artistic) 
community. In fact 7.5 per cent of the GDP of our nation depends on 
arts and culture."

Berrigan said the arts are not just a frill. They bring communities 
to life, attract tourists and help communities compete economically 
around the world, she said.

"I am not arguing with Dean about whether or not they increased 
funding," Sharpe said. "It was a reallocation of funds. He knows that."

Knowing the Green party is in favour of legalizing marijuana, 20- 
year-old nursing student Katie Bradley asked Berrigan how her 
position will affect the use of harder drugs in Peterborough.

"By legalizing marijuana I am not exactly supporting it," Berrigan 
said. "If you are addicted to marijuana or any drug, you should not 
be thrown in jail for it. There are deeper issues behind that." Del 
Mastro disagreed. The federal government has to address the root 
cause of why people turn to drugs in the first place, not legalize 
marijuana, he said.

"When I talk about going after the drug problem, I am not talking 
about people who are addicted to them," he said, "but the people who 
are peddling this stuff. We have to stop treating them with kid gloves."

While she supports the medical use of marijuana, McGregor said 
anything beyond that is open for discussion.

Sharpe said marijuana provides a lucrative income for biker gangs and 
other organized crime.

NOTES:Toward the end of the debateEmily Berrigansaid "it looks 
likeDean (Del Mastro)is going to win and it kills me to say that." .. 
All the candidates were sipping water from red stainless steel 
Fleming College water bottles given to them from the Fleming Applied 
Agency, the college's integrated marketing communications agency. The 
bottles are given out free of charge to anyone, SAC director Andy 
Glynnsaid.... All the local candidates urged Fleming College students 
to vote on Oct. 14, regardless of political affiliation.

- - - -

Online Video

http://www.peterboroughexaminer.com/ArticleDisplayGenContent.aspx?e=8301
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom