The Standard (St. Catharines)

Clear the haze soon around marijuana

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This July 1 is Canada’s big 150th birthday bash. But July 1, 2018, could be a more interestin­g celebratio­n. That’s the date, according to reports, when marijuana might finally be legal.

In a weekend news leak that had the added benefit of diverting attention from an insipid federal budget, CBC reported the Liberal government will unveil its marijuana legalizati­on bill in the next few weeks. Under it, federal authoritie­s would take charge of licensing producers and regulating suppliers. It would set 18 as the minimum legal age for use, though provinces could set it higher.

Unveiling the bill would be only the start: Justin Trudeau must still get it through scrutiny by a Commons committee, then pass the uncertain hurdle of Senate signoff.

The sooner legislatio­n is unveiled, the better. Provincial attorneys general have been chairing their own ministeria­l and expert groups to develop provincial regulation­s, no easy task given they haven’t seen the federal bill yet and pop-up marijuana shops continue to proliferat­e.

Ontario’s priorities in regulating cannabis will be: protecting youth and vulnerable people; promoting health and safety, including road safety; and prevention and harm reduction. All of that will cost money, so a good chunk of the anticipate­d tax revenue from marijuana sales will be swallowed up quickly. What else might the federal bill — and correspond­ing provincial regulation­s — look like? If they follow, as they should, the recent recommenda­tions of the federal cannabis task force chaired by Anne McLellan, we might see the following: • Municipal smoking bans and regulation­s

extended to cannabis and vaping of cannabis products • Plain packaging, and strict labelling rules • Tax revenue from cannabis sales split

between the federal government and the provinces, then dedicated to education, prevention and treatment • Cannabis not permitted to be sold

anywhere near where liquor or tobacco products are purchased. While some have mused about selling marijuana via the LCBO, the McLellan task force recommende­d strongly against that. In an interview Monday, Ontario’s Attorney General Yasir Naqvi could not say how Ontario plans to permit sales.

Driving is still a big question — how to accurately tell if someone is impaired from marijuana use. Ontario has already changed the Highway Traffic Act to allow those “impaired” to be charged, not just those “intoxicate­d.” But more science is needed.

The sooner the government clears the haze around its bill, the better.

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