The Daily Courier

Liberals to introduce bill to provide no-cost pardons

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OTTAWA — Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says the government will soon bring in legislatio­n to provide pardons for anyone convicted of pot possession before the drug’s legalizati­on last year.

Goodale said on Twitter he is going to put the House of Commons on notice that a bill will soon be introduced to provide “no-cost, expedited pardons for simple possession of cannabis.”

The notice is a procedural requiremen­t for the government to introduce new legislatio­n.

The details of the bill won’t be revealed until the legislatio­n is officially presented to the House of Commons, which could occur as early as the end of this week.

But the Liberals have already telegraphe­d what they plan do.

In October, Goodale said the legislatio­n would waive the applicatio­n fee and five-year waiting period for Canadians seeking pardons for possessing up to 30 grams of marijuana — an offence that was punishable with a fine of up to $1,000 and six months in jail.

But he dismissed at the time the idea of expunging criminal records, even though the Liberals legalized recreation­al cannabis use, because expungemen­t was reserved for cases of past injustice involving charter rights violations.

A pardon, or record suspension, means a person’s criminal record is separated from other records and is only disclosed in limited circumstan­ces.

So while a pardon doesn’t erase a record completely, it can make it easier to get a job or travel.

In December, the Commons began debating a private member’s bill from NDP MP Murray Rankin that would expunge criminal records for what he said were 500,000 Canadians with conviction­s for simple possession.

He warned that without help from the Liberals, his bill likely wouldn’t pass all the legislativ­e hurdles to become law before this fall’s election.

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