USA TODAY International Edition

Canada is expected to legalize marijuana

Pot sales could begin within next 3 months

- Trevor Hughes

Canada’s government is poised to approve sweeping cannabis legalizati­on as soon as this week and could launch marijuana sales by late summer.

The Canadian Senate, the members of which are appointed rather than elected, is expected to OK a legalizati­on measure Thursday after years of quiet study and discussion. After House approval, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government expects to launch legal sales as soon as 10 to 12 weeks from now.

Canada’s approach differs from that in the USA, where nine states and the District of Columbia have legalized cannabis, but there hasn’t been a substantiv­e national discussion about the widely used drug. As part of legalizati­on, the Canadian government probably will inform citizens that admitting to marijuana use might get them barred from crossing the border into the USA, which classifies cannabis as a Schedule 1 drug with “no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse,” according to the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion.

“We’ve very much learned from the early mistakes made by some U.S. states and other jurisdicti­ons,” said Canadian Sen. Tony Dean, an independen­t who sponsored the bill in the Senate. “We know we have a national challenge with cannabis.”

Trudeau and his Liberal Party included marijuana legalizati­on as part of their 2015 campaign. Medical marijuana has been legal in Canada since 2001, and many U.S.-based cannabis companies have jockeyed for position in that market with an eye toward broader legalizati­on.

Recreation­al marijuana sales in Canada could be worth $3.3 billion by 2027, in part because businesses will find it easier to work nationally instead of piecemeal like in the USA. Uruguay is the only other country to legalize marijuana; many countries have decriminal­ized it but prohibit sales.

Canada’s regulation­s, which are being finalized, would permit people as young as 18 to buy marijuana from regulated stores and to grow small amounts at home, depending upon which province or territory they live in. The draft rules call for setting aggressive targets for reducing cannabis use by young people, creating national standards for potency testing and packaging, and setting tax rates low enough to undercut the black market.

By legalizing marijuana at the federal level, the Canadian government sets the stage for more traditiona­l investment while assuring entreprene­urs they can use banks like any other business. In the USA, many cannabis companies must conduct their operations with cash because banks worry the federal government will target them as drug trafficker­s.

“Canada is creating a normal industry. What we have in the United States is a very abnormal industry,” said Roy Bingham, the CEO and co-founder of cannabis data firm BDS Analytics. “In Canada, you see tobacco, alcohol, pharmaceut­ical companies, all these mainstream industries interested in getting involved.”

Bingham said many European countries are closely watching how legalizati­on rolls out in Canada, even though California has more residents and a bigger marijuana marketplac­e: “It’s a respectabl­e, well-regulated country with a democracy that people admire.”

That’s bad news to Kevin Sabet, who runs the U.S.-based anti-legalizati­on group Smart Approaches to Marijuana. Sabet has consulted with Trudeau’s government about his concerns over marijuana edibles, potency and the speed at which the country is moving toward broader cannabis access. His group warns that widespread marijuana legalizati­on will create an industry similar to “Big Tobacco” with untold public health costs.

The plan discussed by the Canadian Senate this week lacks one major policy point many advocates pushed for: expunging the criminal records of people convicted for minor marijuana crimes. In California, which launched legal sales Jan. 1, some prosecutor­s wiped away those records, and prosecutor­s in Seattle seek to do the same.

“We’ve very much learned from the early mistakes made by some U.S. states and other jurisdicti­ons.” Canadian Sen. Tony Dean

 ??  ?? A man wearing a Canadian maple leaf flag with a marijuana leaf takes part in the annual 4/20 rally on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Ontario, on April 20. LARS HAGBERG/GETTY IMAGES
A man wearing a Canadian maple leaf flag with a marijuana leaf takes part in the annual 4/20 rally on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Ontario, on April 20. LARS HAGBERG/GETTY IMAGES

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