Lethbridge Herald

Legal limbo over pot

- An editorial from the Amherst News (distribute­d by The Canadian Press)

There’s a distinct lack of clarity at this point about how a full-fledged marijuana sales and distributi­on apparatus is going to spring to life across the country in just 10 short months.

But that’s not the only place where we’re short a little clarity: with things in legal limbo, you have to wonder when police forces are going to simply stop raiding black-market marijuana dispensari­es.

Yes, the dispensari­es are often either breaking the law, or skirting very, very close to it.

Yes, the current law forbidding the sale of marijuana is still in place. Even if the drug is legalized, it’s beginning to look like sales will be handled through provincial­ly managed outlets, rather than through private dispensari­es. That’s certainly the way that the Ontario government has signalled it’s going to go, setting up its own stand-alone outlets until the umbrella of the provincial liquor control board.

(There are clear advantages to that: more profit to provincial coffers, a better guarantee of product standards, and an already-in-place system to hopefully exclude minors from purchasing the product, just for a start.)

So, the dispensari­es are in a spot: their product is illegal right now without a prescripti­on, and will likely remain, at best, a bootleg product even after legalizati­on. Where provincial government­s legislate control of alcohol to their own Crown corporatio­ns, you don’t see any private liquor businesses operating on Main Street.

That being said, in province after province, police forces have staged raids on dispensari­es when the sales get too obvious, too public, and frankly, too embarrassi­ng for the police forces involved. Dispensari­es that keep their heads down and their operations quiet don’t seem to generate the police interest — and trundle along, even though they are walked the same legal/illegal line as their fellows.

It’s made for an interestin­g mess — and, at the same time, a waste of money. Police forces spend time and resources raiding dispensari­es, arresting staff and preparing evidence for court. Prosecutor­s spend their time preparing for court, and courts use up valuable time as well, while at the same time, everyone is essentiall­y going through the motions, prosecutin­g people for a crime that, within months, might not even be a crime.

It’s tough to see how this makes sense, either from the point of view of the criminal justice system or from those caught up in it. Is it fair to raid one public dispensary, but not all? Are there unwritten rules nascent dispensari­es should follow?

Maybe there should be some interim guidance from the federal government.

Or better yet, some clear common sense.

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