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Notes toward a BCCLA position on cannabis law reform 1979 The new government has said it will do something toward the decriminalization of marijuana use. This seems the appropriate time to suggest the best way of doing it. Cannabis Control Policy: A Discussion paper, produced by the Health Protection Branch of the Department of National Health and Welfare in January 1979 (referred to here as CCP) was presumably intended as the basis for a revision of the policy of the Liberal government. Presumably it will still come forward as advice to the present government. In any case it is a careful analysis, and it makes sense for us to direct our comments to the alternatives that it defines. Of the eight alternatives it considers (see table: CCP figure D-ll, at p.93) the only ones worth our consideration are 5, 6, and 7. The first four do not go far enough, and the last, federal withdrawal in favour of provincial jurisdiction, would be a disaster. Number 7, which the paper calls "Legislation (Regulation)", amounts to treating cannabis like alcohol. It seems to be both the best solution and the one destined in the very long run to be adopted. At the same time it is surely politically far too unpopular for any government to be willing to look at it. We should therefore simply record our belief in it, and turn our attention to the choice between alternatives 5 ("Semi-Prohibition") and 6 ("Transfer to Schedule G"). Alternative 5, "Semi-Prohibition" (CCP pp. 99-102), seems to be a proposal developed in this paper and presented in the most favourable light (CCP pp. 109-1.10). It seeks to distinguish "consumption-related conduct" from "commercial conduct". It removes the offence of possession, and removes offences for gratuitous transfers of small amounts and for cultivation of a few plants for one's own consumption but at the same time it provides for summary confiscation (without special search provisions). Trafficking remains a serious offence. It draws the line by a graded scale of amounts found in possession: 30 grams or less, no offence; 30 to 120 grams, opportunity to show that possession was for the purpose of trafficking; 120 grams or more, onus on the accused to show possession was not for the purpose of trafficking. Possession for the purpose is liable to the same penalties as trafficking. The recommended form of legislation is a separate "Cannabis Control Act" (CCP p.112) Alternative 6, "Transfer to Schedule G" (CCP pp. 102-104), refers to Schedule G of the Food and Drugs Act, which now lists such drugs as amphetamines and barbiturates, and would make cannabis subject to Part III of the Act. There is no offence for possession, and the definition of trafficking, unlike that of the Narcotic Control Act does not include giving, administering, or distributing. There is no offence for cultivation, although the paper points out that control of cultivation could be left within the Narcotic Control Act since it defines "marijuana" independently of cannabis in section 2 and refers to it under the offence of cultivation in section 6. Part III of the Food and Drugs Act gives peace officers the same extraordinary powers of search and seizure as the Narcotic Control Act. Transfer of "Cannabis sativa" from the schedule of the Narcotic Control Act to Schedule G could be done by order-in-council, but the paper points out that this method is likely to attract political criticism (CCP p.109). This paper prefers to have one or the other of 5 and 6 (i.e. what it calls a "de-penalization option" (CCP p.87)), to the others, and between the two it prefers 5 over 6. The reasons it gives for preferring 5 over 6 are these (CCP pp. 109-110):
To this we can add the possibility, in a separate control act of not providing peace officers with special powers of search. On the other hand, there seem to be strong reasons for preferring Schedule G:
Our policy question then turns on the question of constitutional law (discussed in the paper; CCP pp. 69-72). On this question we have the following reply from Gordon Turriff: You had asked me to consider whether the provinces could legislate in relation to cannabis were the substance to be transferred from the Narcotic Control Act to the Food and Drug Act.In the light of this advice, I recommend that we make representations to the effect that:
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