Calgary Herald

Use pot revenue to fund mental health, urges group

Taxes from cannabis could also bankroll addiction treatments, advocates suggest

- JURIS GRANEY jgraney@postmedia.com twitter.com/jurisgrane­y

The province should reinvest all tax revenue from the sale of legal cannabis in Alberta into addiction and mental health services, an advocacy group says.

Sateen Werner, a graduate student at the University of Alberta and member of Student Advocates for Public Health, told a forum Wednesday the legalizati­on of cannabis and the new revenue stream has the potential to address the “concerning gaps” in the province’s “underfunde­d and under-resourced” addictions and mental health services in Alberta.

According to a 2015 government report, just six per cent of healthcare spending goes to addiction and mental health programs.

Sateen said, based on calculatio­ns of Alberta’s population and comparison­s with U.S. states with legal cannabis such as Colorado, the province could potentiall­y see $50 million in added revenue in the first year of legalizati­on and up to $100 million in the second year.

Cameron Wild, professor of socio-behavioura­l sciences with the University of Alberta School of Public Health, said that money is desperatel­y needed for health support programs, since about 20 per cent of adult Albertans are currently living with mental health or addictions issues.

“And of them, about half report they either don’t get service at all or don’t get enough service when they seek care,” he said.

“This is an astounding­ly high level of unmet service need that would be intolerabl­e in virtually every other area of health. We don’t talk about unmet service needs in cancer or diabetes in this way, because addiction and mental-health issues have traditiona­lly been the black sheep in the health-care discussion.

“I don’t think we have ever been in such a historical­ly good spot to begin real, serious discussion about how we are going to strategize and use revenues more creatively than we have in the past to address these pressing mental health problems.”

Investing 100 per cent of tax revenue into health services may prove to be a lofty ambition, but the suggestion a cannabisfu­nded revenue stream should be directed into a special pool that would give addictions and health services first dibs before being doled out to other services is not unheard of.

In fact, public health, education and addictions support has been at the forefront in almost every example of legalizati­on of recreation­al cannabis in the United States.

In Washington, 50 per cent of all cannabis-related revenue is mandated to go back into the health-care system, and in Colorado, the first $40 million of retail tax revenue each year goes toward renovating, upgrading or building new schools in the state.

The federal government’s task force report into the legalizati­on of cannabis in Canada also made clear recommenda­tions to ensure that revenue should be used as a “source of funding for administra­tion, education, research and enforcemen­t.”

Earlier this year, the Liberal government said it wanted to table legislatio­n to legalize and regulate the recreation­al use of pot this spring.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES ?? The legalizati­on of marijuana could help pay for health care, says student group.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES The legalizati­on of marijuana could help pay for health care, says student group.

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