The Province

Impaired driving bill in limbo

Legislatio­n covering legalized marijuana won’t be discussed until May

- MARIE-DANIELLE SMITH mdsmith@postmedia.com

OTTAWA — A Liberal government bill that adjusts impaired driving laws in tandem with plans to legalize marijuana is facing delays in the Senate, despite growing concerns over its urgency.

The upper chamber’s legal committee has hit the pause button on a review of Bill C-46 until early May so it can focus on meeting a May 1 deadline to report on cannabis legislatio­n, Bill C-45.

But some senators, and groups such as Mothers Against Drunk Driving, are urging the committee to do everything it cannot to delay the impaired driving bill, saying lives are at stake and police need to see a final version of the bill in order to prepare.

Liberal Sen. Serge Joyal, the committee’s chair, said the committee is switching focus on “order” from the Senate, which agreed on a set of deadlines. He added that senators shouldn’t be rushed out of taking the time to understand the consequenc­es and impact of the legislatio­n. “I can understand those who are in a hurry to say let’s finish with this as soon as possible. I have great receptivit­y for the urgency to go with that. But on the other hand not at the expense of doing the things right, and, I should say, responsibl­y.”

This should not be seen as a filibuster, Joyal said, although some Senate sources perceive the delay to be orchestrat­ed by the Tories. The committee’s vice-chair, Conservati­ve Sen. Pierre-Hughes Boisvenu, said “there’s no partisansh­ip in what we’re doing.”

Joyal explained that according to testimony heard in committee, the justice department will likely approve drug screening devices around the end of March. Then these still need to be procured and distribute­d to police forces. “It’s not as if everything was ready to unfold and we were waiting for the bill,” he said.

Boisvenu also justified delays by saying that police forces need more time to prepare for the law to come into place. He said he plans to try amending the bill so its coming-into-force will be contingent upon police capacity.

But taking the opposite view, Independen­t Sen. Marc Gold, another member of the committee, believes that police forces would benefit from having laws on the books sooner. “Once the bill is passed and (police) know exactly what’s in the bill then the training, which has already ramped up, can be finetuned to deal with the content of the law,” he said.

He disagrees with the delay, saying it could be avoided. “If my colleagues were prepared to add some extra sessions to sit as a committee outside our regular times, or to extend our sittings longer so we could do both, I would totally be in support of that.”

Conservati­ves in the Senate have recently been accused of delaying bills for the sake of delay. But Boisvenu said “the government has a right to legalize marijuana because it’s been elected with a big majority,” and said he believes that both bills can pass before the summer.

Several of the legislatio­n’s components, including debatable per se limits on THC and new random breathalyz­er testing, have come under scrutiny. Because of concerns, some worry the law’s constituti­onality could be challenged in court.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Some senators and groups such as Mothers Against Drunk Driving are alarmed a bill adjusting impaired driving laws to cover legal pot won’t be passed at the same time as the cannabis bill.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Some senators and groups such as Mothers Against Drunk Driving are alarmed a bill adjusting impaired driving laws to cover legal pot won’t be passed at the same time as the cannabis bill.

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