The Prince George Citizen

Marijuana bill goes back to Senate

- Joan BRYDEN Citizen news service

OTTAWA — A federal bill to legalize recreation­al cannabis was bounced back to the Senate on Monday, where the government’s representa­tive argued it’s time to get on with lifting Canada’s almost century-old prohibitio­n on marijuana.

The House of Commons voted 20582 to reject 13 amendments passed by Senate, including one which would have authorized provinces to prohibit home cultivatio­n of marijuana plants if they choose.

Senators now have to decide whether to defer to the will of the elected government or insist on some or all of their amendments, digging in for a protracted parliament­ary battle.

Sen. Peter Harder, the Liberal government’s representa­tive in the upper house, argued that senators have done all they could to study the bill thoroughly and recommend improvemen­ts. He said it’s time to respect the decision of MPs, who will be accountabl­e to their constituen­ts in next year’s election.

“With cannabis legislatio­n, Canadians are ready for us to move forward,” Harder told the Senate, predicting that “there may come a day, perhaps in the not-so-distant future, when we remember prohibitio­n as absurd.”

Quebec and Manitoba have already decided to ban home-grown weed, although the bill allows individual­s to grow up to four plants per dwelling.

The Senate’s amendment was intended to head off any legal challenges to the provinces’ constituti­onal authority to prohibit home cultivatio­n.

Harder noted that the bill already allows provinces to limit home cultivatio­n to just one plant, if they choose. So, he said, the dispute over home cultivatio­n between the two houses of Parliament essentiall­y comes down to “a single plant.”

Among the other Senate amendments rejected by the government was one that would have prohibited any marijuanab­randed swag, such as T-shirts and ball caps.

The government accepted 27 other largely technical amendments made by the Senate and tweaked two others.

Five different Senate committees minutely examined various aspects of the legalizati­on bill, hearing from more than 200 witnesses.

Harder argued that the approach the upper house took to the bill will be studied by students of history as a shining example of how the so-called chamber of sober second thought is supposed to operate.

In particular, he applauded Indigenous senators for raising concerns about the lack of consultati­on with Aboriginal communitie­s. That forced the government to make a written commitment to more consultati­on and increased funding to help communitie­s deal with the potential negative fallout from legalizati­on and cash in on the potential economic windfall.

Harder said their role “demonstrat­ed once again that the Senate has come into its own as an effective, influentia­l and, indeed, indispensa­ble platform in Parliament for the voices of Indigenous Peoples.”

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