Toronto Star

Underage access to marijuana a concern

Clearer delineatio­n between medicinal and recreation­al use needed, premier says

- ROBERT BENZIE QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU CHIEF

Talk about a joint effort.

There are bureaucrat­s from a dozen provincial department­s working on an exhaustive cannabis strategy that will examine the impact of legalized recreation­al marijuana.

As Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government prepares to change federal laws next year, officials at Queen’s Park are looking at everything from the effects on health and road safety to justice issues and fiscal implicatio­ns.

Public servants from the Ministries of Health, Education, Finance, Transporta­tion, the Attorney General, Community Safety and Correction­al Services, Municipal Affairs, Children and Youth Services, Indigenous Relations and Reconcilia­tion, Community and Social Services, the Treasury Board secretaria­t, and the cabinet office are involved in the effort.

Premier Kathleen Wynne emphasized Thursday that regulating the drug and limiting access for children and teenagers is a key concern no matter what the forthcomin­g federal legislatio­n looks like.

“I want there to be a controllin­g protocol in place. I think it is important in the same way that in Ontario we have controls on alcohol,” Wynne told CBC Radio’s Metro Morning.

“We need to have some regulation of recreation­al marijuana. What I’m concerned about right now is that there hasn’t been a clear delineatio­n between recreation­al and medicinal marijuana,” she said.

While such marijuana is legal for those who have a prescripti­on from a medical doctor, the storefront “dispensari­es” sprouting up across Toronto are illegal.

Wynne said the lack of legislativ­e clarity from Ottawa has allowed the weed outlets to thrive to the point that there are more than 100 in the city even with the police cracking down.

“I think that’s why we are seeing these shops put up. Right now the only mechanism to deal with those is municipal bylaws. We need that federal framework in order to be able to put a regulatory regime in place,” she said.

“It’s true that within our government we are looking at — once the federal framework is in place — what would we be prepared to do as a province in terms of regulating marijuana.”

“I only put the LCBO forward as a possibilit­y because it already exists, because we understand how it could regulate the substance,” she said.

“But if there’s a better suggestion, we’re open to that.”

Wynne insisted that government control of recreation­al cannabis is not about ensuring the proceeds go into provincial coffers.

“For me that’s really not the point; the point is how do we make sure that we know what is in this substance once it is legalized and how do we control access, for young people particular­ly, who shouldn’t have access to it.”

Liberal MP Bill Blair (Scarboroug­h Southwest) is Trudeau’s point man on updating Canada’s marijuana laws.

Blair, a former Toronto police chief, has expressed concern about the illegal dispensari­es and points out that the LCBO has long been effective at preventing underage Ontarians from getting alcohol.

LCBO officials have said they are closely monitoring developmen­ts in Ottawa and at Queen’s Park and await direction from the province on what role the corporatio­n will play in cannabis retailing or wholesalin­g.

Warren (Smokey) Thomas, president of the Ontario Public Service Employees Union that represents LCBO workers, has said it makes sense to utilize the provincial agency’s trained employees and secure warehouses to ensure marijuana is safely dispensed.

 ?? LUCAS OLENIUK/TORONTO STAR ?? Police arrest Erin Goodwin, manager of Cannabis Culture, during a raid at the dispensary on Queen St. W. on Thursday afternoon. Cannabis Culture owner and marijuana activist Jodie Emery, wife to “the Prince of Pot” Marc Emery, told the Star the shop is closed, but “we do plan to reopen.”
LUCAS OLENIUK/TORONTO STAR Police arrest Erin Goodwin, manager of Cannabis Culture, during a raid at the dispensary on Queen St. W. on Thursday afternoon. Cannabis Culture owner and marijuana activist Jodie Emery, wife to “the Prince of Pot” Marc Emery, told the Star the shop is closed, but “we do plan to reopen.”

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