Lethbridge Herald

Trudeau stands by legalized pot

PM SAYS LEGALIZED POT WILL KEEP YOUTH SAFE, TAKE MONEY FROM GANGS

- Dirk Meissner

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says regulating the sale of marijuana will protect young people and take money away from criminal gangs, but the government is drawing the line at pot when it comes to legalizing illicit drugs.

The federal government’s approach on marijuana has two goals, Trudeau said Thursday during a visit to Canadian Forces Base Esquimalt in the Victoria area.

“The first is to protect our kids. Right now we know that young people have easier access to marijuana than just about any other illicit substance. It’s easier to buy a joint for a teenager than it is to buy a bottle of beer. That’s not right,” he said.

“Secondly, we know that criminal organizati­ons and street gangs are making billions of dollars off of the sale of marijuana. We feel that regulating it, controllin­g it will bring that revenue out of the pockets of criminals and put it into a system where we can both monitor, tax it and ensure that we are supporting people who are facing challenges related or unrelated to drug use.”

But the government doesn’t plan to go any further than legalizing marijuana in legislatio­n he hopes will be introduced by this summer.

“We are not planning on including any other illicit substances in the move towards legalizing and controllin­g and regulating,” he said.

Trudeau is scheduled to participat­e in a roundtable discussion with first responders and health-care workers today in Vancouver on British Columbia’s opioid crisis, which killed 922 people last year.

A recent federal announceme­nt giving $10 million to the provincial government to help fight overdose deaths is aimed at improving the response to the crisis, said Trudeau.

Although it is up to the province to decide how that money is spent, he says people in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside told him in December more money was needed to keep safe consumptio­n sites open longer for drug users in the inner-city neighbourh­ood.

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