After 92 years of prohibition, the legality of Cannabis finally became a mainstream Canadian federal election issue in 2015.
The Conservative position was to toughen the laws.
The NDP Platform [Download PDF format: 5.1MB 81 colour pages] promised decriminalization immediately on forming government. Recreational users could still be fined, but would no longer get a criminal record.
The federal Green Party platform promised legalization instead of decriminalization.
“Ending the war on drugs
“Between 2008 and 2011, according to the Department of Justice, Canada spent $311 million targeting illicit drugs, with a majority of that money going to law enforcement. Most of that was for the ‘war’ against cannabis (marijuana). Marijuana prohibition is also prohibitively costly in other ways, including criminalizing youth and fostering organized crime. Cannabis prohibition, which has gone on for decades, has utterly failed and has not led to reduced drug use in Canada.
“After analyzing the recommendation of the Canadian Senate’s 2002 Special Committee on Drugs and the examples of strategies used by some European countries, the Green Party of Canada has come to the conclusion that it is time to legalize the adult use of marijuana. Furthermore, the Greens believe that drug addictions should be treated as a health problem, not as criminal offences.
“Green Party MPs will:
- Legalize marijuana by removing marijuana from the drug schedule;
- Create a regulatory framework for the safe production of marijuana by small, independent growers;
- Develop a taxation rate for marijuana similar to that of tobacco;
- Establish the sale of marijuana to adults for medicinal or personal use through licensed distribution outlets;
- Educate the public about the health threats of marijuana, tobacco, and other drug use;
- Launch a public consultation on the decriminalization of illicit drugs, considering the current high costs of the law enforcement effort;
- Provide increased funding to safe injection sites, treatment facilities, and addict rehabilitation.
Like the Green party, Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Party.promised Legalization, although not in quite the same way :
“We will legalize, regulate, and restrict access to marijuana.
“Canada’s current system of marijuana prohibition does not work. It does not prevent young people from using marijuana and too many Canadians end up with criminal records for possessing small amounts of the drug.
“Arresting and prosecuting these offenses is expensive for our criminal justice system. It traps too many Canadians in the criminal justice system for minor, non-violent offenses. At the same time, the proceeds from the illegal drug trade support organized crime and greater threats to public safety, like human trafficking and hard drugs.
“To ensure that we keep marijuana out of the hands of children, and the profits out of the hands of criminals, we will legalize, regulate, and restrict access to marijuana.
“We will remove marijuana consumption and incidental possession from the Criminal Code, and create new, stronger laws to punish more severely those who provide it to minors, those who operate a motor vehicle while under its influence, and those who sell it outside of the new regulatory framework.
“We will create a federal/provincial/territorial task force, and with input from experts in public health, substance abuse, and law enforcement, will design a new system of strict marijuana sales and distribution, with appropriate federal and provincial excise taxes applied.”
2015 Liberal Platform Online: Real Change: Marijuana (download the PDF: 8.0 MB 88 colour pages of the entire 2015 Liberal Platform)
The 2015 winner in our winner-take-all system was the Liberal Party, whose plan was to “legalize, regulate, and restrict access to marijuana.”
Making Law
It is possible for anyone to follow the process of creating the law online.
Anyone can read the draft legislation:
Third Reading version of Bill C-45, the Cannabis Act, An Act respecting cannabis and to amend the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, the Criminal Code and other Acts
Download the 3rd Reading version PDF 1.4MB 148 pages
Follow what’s being said in Parliament about Bill C-45 on Open Parliament
Bill C-45 was introduced to the House of Commons by the Liberal Government, you can follow the process from introduction to Royal Assent at LegisInfo
Amendments to the legislation will go through the Standing Committee on Health HESA
Read all the briefs & testimony (if you use non-free software) watch the committee meeting video on ParlVu
Consultation
On November 21st, 2017 the Health Canada branch of the Justin Trudeau Government began a public consultation that will be open until January 19th, 2018. One might think the Government would undertake its public consultation before actually drafting legislation. A cynical citizen might suspect such a backward agenda might indicate the consultation was purely for show. An optimistic Canadian might think better late than never.
Canadians can participate in the Consultation on the Proposed Approach to the Regulation of Cannabis.
Rather than forming Cannabis policy based on what Canadians want, the consultation seeks feedback on its PROPOSED APPROACH TO THE REGULATION OF CANNABIS (which can also be downloaded in PDF format, 389 KB, 75 pages.)
The Eyolfson Liberal Party website summarizes the proposed approach:
On packaging, we are proposing:
- to make all products tamper-evident and child-resistant;
- to limit the use of colours and graphics that would appeal to youth; and
- to include mandatory health warnings similar to those on tobacco products
On licences, permits and authorizations, we are proposing to put in place a system that would:
- enable a diverse, competitive legal industry that would include both large and small players;
- reduce the risk that organized crime would infiltrate the legal industry; and
- make sure that cannabis products meet high-quality standards.
and offers more background links including:
Infographic: Supply chain for the commercial production and sale of cannabis
Download the PDF format, 1.2 MB, 1 page
Proposed requirements for cultivation, processing, and federal sale licences
Download the PDF format, 182 KB, 1 page
The different provinces are taking different approaches as to how they will implement cannabis legalization. Emery: Reefer monopoly madness – government doesn’t want to legalize pot, but DOES want to profit from it
“The Liberal’s big government ‘lets benefit political insiders’ approach to things just doesn’t make sense.”
— Mike Schreiner, Leader, Green Party of Ontario
The Provincial Green Party of Ontario opposes Monopolized Marijuana
To legalize marijuana sales in Ontario, the GPO supports:
✅ Regulating and licensing small businesses and dispensaries to sell marijuana in a safe and controlled way
✅ Ensuring tax revenues from marijuana sales are used to fund education, mental health and addiction programs
✅ Creating more local jobs and boosting prosperity by supporting small businesses
But the Green Party is not in charge.
Canadian Cannabis Crackdown
Because cannabis was illegal before any sort of scientific testing was done, there has been precious little modern scientific study of the substance. What little study there has been suggests negative effects of cannabis are less harmful than many other substances that can be purchased openly and legally by anyone. Like aspirin. People can kill themselves with aspirin. But it is physically impossible for anyone to kill themselves with cannabis.
The worst health risks with cannabis centre around the fact that it is most often smoked in combination with tobacco, and we now know tobacco is hazardous to our health. And yet the Canadian Government only allowed patients access to edibles after another Supreme Court challenge.
“We believe, however, that the continued prohibition of cannabis jeopardizes the health and well-being of Canadians much more than does the substance itself or the regulated marketing of the substance. In addition, we believe that the continued criminalization of cannabis undermines the fundamental values set out in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and confirmed in the history of a country based on diversity and tolerance.”
— Senate Special Committee on Illegal Drugs (2002)
REPORT OF THE SENATE SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON ILLEGAL DRUGS
And yet the Canadian Government promising cannabis legalization has increased it’s war on cannabis even more. They are cracking down on cannabis at a frantic pace in the lead up to legalization.
This is not right.
Who profits?
“I see legalizing [marijuana] or putting it in shops as trying to normalize narcotics, when the truth is there is nothing normal about it. It’s a mind-altering drug that causes impairments and like cigarettes is not healthy.”
Fantino says he understands the enticement of marijuana. It’s a new cash frontier where many people, including many former police officers and politicians, could get in on the ground floor. This helps explain why the marijuana lobby is so opposed to Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
Trudeau might be their best chance to move this fight forward. With Harper, it’s dead.
“There’s a lot of money in it,” Fantino said. “Big money.”
He said he was offered “to fall in with a company” that wanted to pay him very well to simply lend his name to it.
Not a chance. “I would never do it.”
—Toronto Sun: Legal pot would be boon for organized crime: Fantino (October 16, 2015)
Julian Fantino, who once compared weed to murder, defends opening medical marijuana business
LAW ENFORCEMENT
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- Norman Inkster, Independent Director at Mettrum
— Former head of the RCMP
How public officials got into the weed game - Kash Heed, strategic consultant with National Green BioMed
— Former B.C. Solicitor General and former West Vancouver police chief
Medical marijuana business no gold rush
- Tim Humberstone, ABcann Director / Senior Person in Charge
— Former twenty year member of the RCMP included roles in Municipal/Federal Drug Enforcement and with the Joint Forces Organized Crime Agency
Panda Announces Proposed Qualifying Transaction with ABcann Medicinals Inc. - Jake Ryan, Director of Security for Tilray
— Former RCMP Intelligence Officer and federal criminal investigator overseeing all aspects of Tilray’s security protocols and operations
Why Medical Marijuana Could Be the Modern Gold Rush
- Kim Derry, promoter of marijuana facility THC Meds Ontario Inc.
— Former deputy chief of the Toronto Police Service under then-Chief Bill Blair
Ex-colleague will lobby MP Bill Blair to restrict field of pot growers
- Senator Larry Campbell, advisor to Vodis Innovative Pharmaceuticals Inc.
— Former Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer and Vancouver mayor, sitting Senator, and - Barry Daniel, Wildflower’s head of security — Former Abbotsford police chief
Police chiefs and politicians: The new faces of corporate medical marijuana in B.C.
- Julian Fantino, co-owner Aleafia Total Health Network
— Former Toronto Police Chief, former Chief of York Region, former Chief of London, Ontario Provincial Police commissioner, and - Raf Souccar, owner Aleafia Total Health Network
— Former RCMP deputy commissioner
It stinks to high heaven when top cops are shilling pot: James
- Frank Elsner, principal consultant for UMBRA Strategic Solutions, providing security consulting to marijuana businesses — Former Victoria police chief
Ex-Victoria police chief to provide security consulting to marijuana businesses
- Doug Macdonell, Liberty Leaf Holdings
— Former RCMP officer, lectured extensively to other agencies such as the Drug Enforcement Agency in the U.S. and the Department of Justice Personnel in Canada
Liberty Leaf Strengthens Board of Directors with the Appointment of Doug Macdonell
- Derek Ogden, president of National Access Cannabis — Former head of the RCMP drug squad
Medical cannabis businesses prepare to diversify as legalization looms
- Jerry Habuda, board of PUF Ventures
— Former Toronto Police officer, spent a large part of his career investigating drug crimes, including undercover work, surveillance, patrol at a community housing project, investigating those on bail for drug crimes
PUF:Canadian Sec Stock Quote – PUF Ventures Inc
- Joe Perino, board of PUF Ventures
— Former Toronto Police officer, 30-year veteran of the service who worked on the force’s drug investigations unit - Brian Mullan, consultant for Enertopia/Lexaria, a medical marijuana research company — Former Hamilton, Ontario police chief, worked to bust and seize marijuana grow-ops
Enertopia Announces Former Chief of Police as Security Consultant - Ian Wilms, board of Green Organic Dutchman
— Former President of the Canadian Association of Police Boards
The Green Organic Dutchman Rides on Quality Medical Cannabis, Private Placement and Strong Leadership - Cole Cacciavillani, cofounder and co-chair of Aphria, one of the country’s largest marijuana companies
— Former member of the police services board in his community
Aphria Founder: Cole Cacciavillani
POLITICIANS and PUBLIC SERVANTS - Chuck Rifici, founder and former CEO of Tweed (now Canopy Growth) and now Cannabis Wheaton
— Former Chief Financial Officer of the Liberal Party of Canada under Justin Trudeau
These prominent Canadians want you to buy their weed - Mark Zekulin, CEO of Tweed
— Former senior adviser to former Ontario finance minister Dwight Duncan, and - Dr. Joshua Tepper, Independent Director at Mettrum
— Formerly Assistant Deputy Minister at the Ministry of Health, Senior Medical Officer for Health Canada, and - Mike Harcourt, Chairman of True Leaf Medicine Inc.
— Former B.C. Premier
How public officials got into the weed game | Public servants and former politicians are buying into legal pot, raising concerns of cronyism and conflict of interes - Anne McLellan, Bennett Jones Law
— Former Deputy Prime Minister of Canada, Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness, Minister of Health, Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada, head of the Liberal Legalization Task Force
Questions raised over marijuana task force chair’s ties to industry - Tom Shipley, Director of Quality Assurance, Tweed
— Formerly worked on toxicology research while at Health Canada
Here Are All the Ways You Can Get Rich in the Legal Weed Market - Herb Dhaliwal, Chairman, National Green BioMed
— Former Vancouver MP and federal cabinet minister
Pot industry sees high times on horizon with Trudeau victory - Neil Belot, Board of Directors for Aurora
— Formerly a public servant in several ministries within the Ontario government
Aurora Appoints Mr. Neil Belot as Chief Brand Officer - Ivan Vrana, founder of Aslan Ross Consulting
— Worked for the Federal Government; the Patented Medicine Prices Review Board, Finance Canada and in various senior policy positions at Health Canada; involved in Marihuana for Medical Purposes Regulations
Canadian Medical Marijuana MMPR Consultant Ivan Ross Vrána Interview - Sandy Pratt, Chief Financial Officer, Emerald Health
— Worked at Deloitte (auditing firm involved in the senate scandal), Vice President of Business Development and Executive Financial Officer of the Royal British Columbia Museum, a Crown corporation
About Emerald Health Botanicals - Shane Morris, VP, Scientific Affairs and Stakeholder Relations for Hydropothecary CEO
— Federal Government, Treasury Board of Canada’s senior advisor on regulatory affairs; reporting for Resources Canada’s major projects management office
Former B.C. health minister Terry Lake to join growing marijuana company - George Smitherman, THC BioMed, Alta Vista Ventures
— Former Ontario Liberal deputy premier; 30+ years public policy fields at Municipal, Provincial, Federal Level; Senior Advisor, Minister of Energy and Infrastructure and Ontario’s Minister of Health
How public officials got into the weed game - Ernie Eves, Chairman, Timeless Herbal Care (a Jamaican medical marijuana company)
— Former Progressive Conservative premier of Ontario, and - John Turner board member of Muileboom Organics Inc.
— Former Prime Minister of Canada
These prominent Canadians want you to buy their weed - John Reynolds, advisor to Vodis Innovative Pharmaceuticals Inc
— Former MP with the Progressive Conservative, Reform and Canadian Alliance parties
Police chiefs and politicians: The new faces of corporate medical marijuana in B.C. - Cam Battley, Aurora Senior Vice President, Communications and Medical Affairs
— Former Legislative Assistant to the Canadian Minister of Consumer and Corporate Affairs
Cam Battley Joins Aurora as Senior Vice President, Communications and Medical Affairs - Gary Goodyear, COO and vice-president of research, Aleafia
— Former MP and minister of state
Former Cambridge MP takes position at medical cannabis company
- William Stewart, director, Aleafia
— Former fire chief of Toronto
It stinks to high heaven when top cops are shilling pot: James - Terry Lake, Vice President of Hydropothecary Corp.
— Former health minister of British Columbia, and - Max Cyr, director of customer experience Hydropothecary
— Former supervisor of a medical marijuana police and client services division within Health Canada - Adam Miron, founder of Hydropothecary Corp. — Former national director of Young Liberals of Canada from 2007 to 2009 and a provincial coordinator for the B.C. Liberals in 2007
Former B.C. health minister Terry Lake to join growing marijuana company
- Fred Eisenberger, shareholder in medicinal marijuana growing company “refuses to name”
— Former mayor of Hamilton, Ontario; head of City Council
Hamilton’s mayor is a shareholder in a marijuana growing company - Kal Malhi, Cannabix Breathalyzer business
— Former Marijuana enforcement with the RCMP
Former Mountie join forces with doctor to create marijuana breathalyzer
- Norman Inkster, Independent Director at Mettrum
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Personal note:
I urge every Canadian to participate in the government’s consultation, even those— especially those— like me, who have no personal connection with cannabis.
Regards,
Laurel Russwurm
p.s. Jodie and Marc Emery are facing a massive fine as a direct result of their cannabis activism. If you wish to support their work, you can do so at the Marc and Jodie Emery Support gofundme Page
Go back to Part II: “The Road to Legalization”
Go back To Part I: “Why is Cannabis Illegal”
CREDITS
Canadian Canabis graphic created from Cannabis Chemistry art by Kyrnos with a CC0 dedication to the Public Domain on Pixabay
Quotation from “Cannabis Culture dispensaries: What I did, and why” by Jodie Emery ~ Photograph by Cannabis Culture editor Jeremiah Vandermeer, released under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 License.
The List of Law Enforcement, Politicians and Public Servants compiled by Jodie Emery
Special thanks to @vansopinion8ted for the excellent tip.