Truro News

Senate defeats Conservati­ve bid to impose blanket ban on homegrown marijuana

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The Senate has rejected an attempt to prohibit Canadians from growing a small number of marijuana plants at home once recreation­al cannabis is legalized.

Conservati­ve Sen. Vern White proposed Thursday an amendment to Bill C-45 that would have banned home cultivatio­n entirely across the country.

The amendment was defeated by a vote of 40-33.

Another Conservati­ve senator, Claude Carignan, then proposed an amendment that would have restricted home cultivatio­n to inside a dwelling, banning Canadians from growing pot plants in their yards. That too was defeated, by a vote of 40-31.

The Conservati­ves voted as a block in favour of both amendments but persuaded only a handful of independen­t senators, who now form the biggest faction in the Senate, to back them.

Senators had already accepted 40 amendments proposed earlier this week by the Senate’s social affairs committee. One of those amendments would authorize provinces and territorie­s to ban home cultivatio­n if they choose - as Quebec and Manitoba intend to do — or restrict the number of plants even further than the proposed four per dwelling allowed under the bill as originally drafted.

A number of senators said they share White’s concern that homegrown pot plants could make cannabis more accessible to children, lead to environmen­tal health problems from excessive humidity and mould and cause problems in multiple-unit dwellings.

But they said letting provinces decide for themselves whether to ban home cultivatio­n is a reasonable compromise.

“I think in the end it is a Canadian compromise,” said independen­t Sen. Andre Pratte.

Pratte also argued that allowing some home cultivatio­n is a matter of social equity, pointing out that home-grown weed may be the only option for Canadians in remote areas or for those with limited incomes.

But White cited research that suggests children are more likely to unwittingl­y consume cannabis if it is grown in the home. He said a British Columbia study found calls to poison control centres involving children consuming cannabis doubled between 2013 and 2016.

Moreover, he said a single, mature marijuana plant gives off the same amount of moisture as five to seven average house plants. The attendant increase in humid- ity and mould could cause health problems and also result in hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of damage to multiple-unit dwellings, he maintained.

Those arguments were echoed by other Conservati­ve senators, who also contended that the fourplant limit will be unenforcea­ble.

However, Liberal independen­t Sen. Art Eggleton, who chairs the social affairs committee which examined the bill clause- byclause, suggested the Conservati­ves were cherry- picking the testimony of witnesses to “fearmonger” about the impact of home cultivatio­n. Other experts, he noted, told the committee that fears about humidity and mould only apply to large, illegal growops, which would remain illegal under the bill.

Eggleton cited one expert who maintained that “having a shower without the fan on” would produce more moisture in a home than four marijuana plants.

“So I don’t think we can fearmonger based on some of the horror stories around illicit growops,” he said.

Eggleton also said that experts told the committee children won’t get stoned if they accidental­ly nibble on a cannabis leaf, because it has to be heated to activate the primary psychoacti­ve component, THC.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? The Senate has rejected an attempt to prohibit Canadians from growing a small number of marijuana plants at home once recreation­al cannabis is legalized.
FILE PHOTO The Senate has rejected an attempt to prohibit Canadians from growing a small number of marijuana plants at home once recreation­al cannabis is legalized.

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