Ottawa Citizen

Clouds loom over future of legal pot

Senate’s Aboriginal Peoples committee latest to call for a temporary freeze

- TERRY PEDWELL

The Senate’s Aboriginal Peoples committee has joined a Red Chamber chorus calling for a delay in legalizing recreation­al marijuana, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau appears to be, in reefer vernacular, bogarting Bill C-45.

Asked whether his Liberal government would entertain a delay of as much as a year, Trudeau quoted parliament­ary secretary Bill Blair’s assertion that “legalizati­on is not an event, it’s a process.”

Blair, a former Toronto police chief, meanwhile, is hinting that an amnesty might be on the table for at least half a million Canadians with pot possession conviction­s, Sharon Kirkey writes.

With one Senate committee after another recommendi­ng changes, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau left the door open a crack Wednesday to the possibilit­y of a delay in enacting his Liberal government’s much-maligned cannabis legalizati­on bill.

But with less than two months to go before Parliament breaks for the summer, Trudeau was non-committal on the question of whether his government would bend to a call from the Senate’s Aboriginal Peoples committee to delay the measure by as much as a year.

In a report Tuesday, the committee denounced as “atrocious” the government’s efforts to consult with Indigenous communitie­s, urging the Liberals to delay Bill C-45 to properly negotiate tax-sharing, prepare culturally appropriat­e education materials, draft addiction strategies and ensure First Nations can decide for themselves whether they want pot to be legal in their communitie­s.

The Liberals were hoping to legalize recreation­al use of cannabis by July, but have already indicated that deadline would be pushed back by several weeks to give provincial government­s and police authoritie­s time to prepare for the new law.

When asked whether he’d be willing to delay implementi­ng the bill, Trudeau didn’t answer directly, but indicated the Liberals will hold discussion­s with a number of affected communitie­s as they forge ahead with legalizati­on.

“We’ll continue to consult a broad range of Canadians,” Trudeau said as he entered a meeting of his caucus. “And as our parliament­ary secretary Bill Blair says regularly, legalizati­on is not an event, it’s a process. And that process will continue.”

Two other Senate bodies also called on the government to take more actions to prepare for legalizati­on.

The chamber’s committee on national security and defence urged the government to seek further clarificat­ion from the United States about the treatment of Canadian travellers, fearing those who admit using pot legally could face lengthy border interrogat­ions or be turned away entirely.

“Canadians must be confident that they will still be able to cross into the United States without fear that activities legal in Canada will be held against them,” Senator and committee chair Gwen Boniface said in a statement.

Concerns were also raised about unintended economic consequenc­es, should Canadians doing business with the U.S. suddenly find themselves unable to cross the border, said Sen. Jean-Guy Dagenais.

“The mobility of people and goods across the U.S. border is crucial to Canada’s economy,” Dagenais said. “We cannot afford to be unprepared.”

The Senate’s standing committee on legal and constituti­onal affairs expressed “serious concerns” with the potential impact of cannabis use on vulnerable population­s, including youth and people living with mental illness, such as schizophre­nia.

It also suggested Ottawa negotiate revenue-sharing agreements with provinces and municipali­ties to split money collected through ticketing for cannabis-related offences included in the legislatio­n. And it called on the government to specify what authority provinces and territorie­s will have to regulate — or even prohibit — possession and cultivatio­n of cannabis plants in designated areas.

Trudeau repeated Wednesday that legalizati­on would squeeze organized crime out of the lucrative cannabis market. But a real estate group warned against allowing people to grow marijuana in their residences until new regulation­s are in place.

Canadian Real Estate Associatio­n head Michael Bourque called on the government to place a moratorium on home cultivatio­n until provinces can pass stricter housing rules to prevent property damage, such as the spread of mould and fungus through ventilatio­n systems.

Bill C-45 would allow individual­s to grow up to four marijuana plants each for personal consumptio­n.

The Senate is expected to vote on the bill before the end of June, although the chamber’s social affairs committee is still conducting its own study.

The legislatio­n as currently written stipulates the law won’t come into force until Trudeau’s cabinet fixes a date through an order of the Governor-in-Council.

Must be confident that they will still be able to cross into the United States without fear that activities legal in Canada will be held against them.

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