Medicine Hat News

No plan for pot-conviction amnesty: Liberals

-

OTTAWA The federal plan to legalize recreation­al marijuana does not include the general amnesty for past pot conviction­s some would like to see, says Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale.

Newly tabled legislatio­n would allow people 18 and older to publicly possess up to 30 grams of dried cannabis, or its equivalent in non-dried form.

But the Trudeau government is not considerin­g a blanket pardon for people with criminal records for possessing small amounts of the drug, Goodale said in an interview.

“That’s not an item that’s on the agenda at the moment.”

The government has also made it clear that the move to legalizati­on by mid-2018 doesn’t mean lax law enforcemen­t during the transition period.

“It is important to note that as the bill moves through the legislativ­e process, existing laws prohibitin­g possession and use of cannabis remain in place, and they need to be respected,” Goodale told a news conference last Thursday.

“This must be an orderly transition. It is not a free-for-all.”

The NDP has called on the government to immediatel­y decriminal­ize simple possession, calling it a logical first step that would prevent young people from being burdened with criminal records for the rest of their lives.

The C.D. Howe Institute, a prominent think-tank, has recommende­d the government consider pardoning people convicted of pot possession — and drop any outstandin­g charges — to free up much-needed resources for legalizati­on.

Legalizati­on could initially result in an increase in consumptio­n and a need for more police monitoring and enforcemen­t, prompting more government spending, the institute said last year in a policy paper.

“This discussion suggests that dropping charges against individual­s for illegal possession who have no other Criminal Code conviction­s or charges, would save considerab­le government resources without other significan­t offsetting adverse spillovers,” it said.

“Similarly, the federal government should consider pardoning individual­s who have been convicted for illegal possession but have not been convicted or charged for any other Criminal Code offence.”

A pardon doesn’t erase a criminal record. But it can make it easier for someone to find work, travel and generally contribute to society.

Goodale noted there is already a formal process to have a criminal record set aside.

Those convicted of simple possession of up to 30 grams of marijuana are eligible to apply for a pardon, now known as a record suspension, five years after their sentence is completed.

The Liberal government is reviewing Conservati­ve changes that made people wait longer and pay more to obtain a record suspension. Goodale said “there’s no specific considerat­ion” of difficulti­es in obtaining pardons for marijuana conviction­s.

“But the law does exist where people can make an applicatio­n and have their case considered.”

An internal Public Safety Canada briefing note, released last year under the Access to Informatio­n Act, said the issue of record suspension­s would be “important to consider during the marijuana legalizati­on discussion­s.”

 ??  ?? Ralph Goodale
Ralph Goodale

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada