The Welland Tribune

Health concerns should be a buzzkill for pot-happy politician­s

- MARK BONOKOSKI markbonoko­ski@gmail.com

If the Trudeau Liberals were Boy Scouts, they’d be miserable failures in living up to the troop’s famous motto of “Be Prepared.”

Anyone who still thinks the Liberals have all the pieces in place in their rush to legalize the recreation­al use of marijuana by Canada Day 2018 has being smoking the drapes. Health concerns? Hmmm, perhaps it would have been best to have gotten onto this long before now, seeing as how sucking in THC-laced smoke into the lungs just might have some health repercussi­ons for the burgeoning toker crowd. But that is not the case.

While Ottawa’s parliament­arians were enjoying their last week of summer recess before returning to the partisan fray, an allparty Commons health committee began meeting only this Monday to question medical and legal profession­als on the looming legislatio­n.

Pot producers were scheduled to be there, as well, over the five days of proposed uninterrup­ted meetings. And coppers, too. “We have a lot to learn, and a lot to listen to,” said committee chair Bill Casey, a Liberal MP from Nova Scotia. No kidding.

In a rather obvious attempt to deflect attention away from two corruption trials — one in Sudbury involving alleged byelection fiddling, and a criminal trial that commenced Monday in Toronto regarding the alleged erasing of damaging e-mails in the premier’s office — the Wynne Liberals of Ontario last week dropped their plan on how they would handle wacky tobaccy’s availabili­ty in the country’s most-populated province.

Ontario is planning on ramping up the sale of pot by having 150 stand-alone unionized stores in place by 2020, and making 19 the legal age for cannabis use among its citizenry.

NDP MP Don Davies, vice-chair of the fed’s health committee, is one of many concerned about the Liberals’ push to legalize pot, accusing them via the CBC of “cramming” in witnesses in order to displace proper parliament­ary debate and public engagement.

“I’m concerned,” he said “(that) they’re trying to rip the bandage off and move to the next stage without getting really varied and diverse input from Canadians.”

The Canadian Medical Associatio­n, for example, has been like a loop tape in repeating its concern about the health risks of cannabis, particular­ly when smoked rather than ingested as edibles.

It has also been urging the Trudeau Liberals to set the legal age for cannabis consumptio­n at 21, which the Ontario Liberals obviously chose to ignore last week when they threw their pot doors open.

The Liberal chair of the health committee, however, has concerns he evidently finds more serious than the hauling in lungs full of THC-laden smoke from a combusting weed.

As far as Bill Casey is concerned, his committee’s key policy issues should centre on preventing the contaminat­ion of pot-growing facilities, the four-plant allowance for personal use, and setting the minimum age of access at 18. Other than that, everyone needs to chill.

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