The Peterborough Examiner

More to do as Canada shifts to legal weed, Liberals say

- JORDAN PRESS

OTTAWA — Canada’s shift to a legal cannabis regime is just the first of what the government says are several steps to come, from regulating edibles to training more drug police.

The steps include rules for new forms of cannabis, scientific research on the effects of legalizati­on and a bill to allow for easier pardons for past conviction­s of simple pot possession.

The government intends to launch consultati­ons near the end of the calendar year on what rules should be in place for “new classes” of cannabis, including edibles and concentrat­es.

There will be no legislatio­n, just regulation­s. Health Canada needs to approve any new rules by Oct. 17, 2019.

Otherwise edibles will become legal without any framework. But the government intends to finalize the regulation­s well before the federal election slated for the fall of next year.

The new pardon plan will also take months to come into effect as legislatio­n to set up the system is to be introduced this fall and must make its way through Parliament. The Liberals are debating what to do on the politicall­y sensitive issue of drug testing in the workplace, but officials quietly suggest many questions are likely to be answered by the courts.

Some projects flowing from the historic legalizati­on effort will be immediatel­y visible while others won’t come to fruition until the end of the year or even later.

Beginning Wednesday, the government hopes Canadians notice a new public awareness campaign about cannabis use targeting young people on social media, minority communitie­s and Indigenous Peoples through local organizati­ons.

The messages in the campaign aren’t going to be too much different than ongoing advertisin­g aimed at adults.

But officials want to adjust their tactics to ensure young people are aware of the health risks associated with smoking pot and the safety risks of driving while high.

Work is ongoing behind the scenes to set up more centres to certify additional specialist drug officers in different parts of the country.

In this way, police don’t have to rely, for the most part, on training in the United States, which doesn’t provide instructio­n in French.

The Federation of Canadian Municipali­ties is asking the Liberals to ensure marijuana tax revenues flow to cities because only three provinces have laid out plans for sharing in the projected windfall to cover the cost of enforcing the new regime.

The federation’s president, Vicki-May Hamm, says the Liberals have not detailed how $81 million in funding for policing will find its way to municipali­ties.

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