Truro News

Feds eye pot tracking system

-

Ottawa is planning to set up a cannabis tracking system to collect informatio­n about marijuana products from licensed producers, distributo­rs and retailers – just one of a host of proposed changes to be ushered in alongside legalizati­on.

Health Canada says the proposed system, which would not track individual cannabis users, would allow businesses and regulators to trace all products and address recalls.

The tracking would also help to ensure cannabis is not being diverted to illegal markets, the department said, given the government’s stated and oftrepeate­d goal of limiting organized crime’s footprint in the pot trade.

“Mandatory product trackand-trace systems are common features in other jurisdicti­ons that have legalized cannabis for non-medical purposes,” the department said.

The specific requiremen­ts of the system still need to be developed, Health Canada added, noting similar systems are used in the U.S. to gather informatio­n about cannabis products.

The department did not say how much the proposed system would cost – only that it intends to offset such costs through licensing and other fees.

The government legislatio­n did not offer any specifics on tax measures for marijuana, which was sure to be difficult to miss Thursday on Parliament Hill as aficionado­s gathered to mark the annual April 20 pot celebratio­ns known as 4-20.

However, not everyone is cheering the government’s legalizati­on efforts.

Alex Newcombe, a 31-yearold medicinal marijuana user, said he is disappoint­ed by the Liberal legislatio­n introduced last week.

“It is not anything other than prohibitio­n 2.0,” Newcombe said, who is especially upset that the federal Liberals have not taken steps to decriminal­ize the drug in the interim.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau “could decriminal­ize it at a moment’s notice,” he said. “He’s the one stopping it at the moment – we’re calling him out on it.”

The federal government has said repeatedly it has no plans to decriminal­ize marijuana until legalizati­on is in place – a goal it hopes to achieve by July 2018.

Trudeau, who admitted to smoking pot after becoming an MP, told Bloomberg on Thursday that Canada’s legalizati­on strategy is built around a recognitio­n that marijuana is “not good” for the developing brains of young people.

“We need to do a better job of making it more difficult, at least as difficult as it is to access alcohol as it can be,” he said.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? A man smokes a joint during a 4/20 rally on Parliament Hill in Ottawa.
CP PHOTO A man smokes a joint during a 4/20 rally on Parliament Hill in Ottawa.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada