Times Colonist

Senate committee backs changes giving provinces power to ban homegrown pot

- JOAN BRYDEN

OTTAWA — A Senate committee has passed more than two dozen amendments to the federal government’s cannabis legalizati­on bill, including one that would allow provinces and territorie­s to ban homegrown marijuana.

But the social affairs committee has refused to accept an amendment that would have prohibited home cultivatio­n outright.

Bill C-45 would allow individual­s to grow up to five plants in a single dwelling.

But Quebec and Manitoba have decided to prohibit home cultivatio­n, setting up future legal challenges in which Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould has said the federal legislatio­n would prevail.

The Senate committee, which was conducting a clause-by-clause examinatio­n of the bill Monday, unanimousl­y supported an amendment specifying that provincial and territoria­l government­s have the authority to prohibit homegrown pot if they so choose.

Among committee members supporting the amendment was Independen­t Sen. Tony Dean, the sponsor of the C-45 in the Senate. That suggests the amendment has the government’s blessing.

However, the committee rejected, by a vote of 7-5, another amendment proposed by Conservati­ve Sen. Judith Seidman that would have imposed a blanket prohibitio­n on home growing across the country.

Among the other amendments passed, the committee agreed that regulation­s flowing from the legislatio­n must impose a maximum potency limit on cannabis products.

It also agreed that the House of Commons and Senate should be given 30 days to review regulation­s before they’re implemente­d and that anyone fined for violating the law should have up to 60 days to pay, rather than the original bill’s stipulatio­n of 30 days.

As well, the committee passed an amendment specifying that a permanent resident who is sentenced to six months or less for breaking the law would not face an additional penalty of being found inadmissab­le to Canada and deported.

Most of the other amendments were technical in nature. Dean, the bill’s sponsor, proposed 29 amendments.

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