Times Colonist

Legalized pot expected to have ‘significan­t impact’ on police work

- BILL CLEVERLEY

Legalizing marijuana will dramatical­ly increase the workload for police forces across the country, says Victoria Police Chief Del Manak.

“The Cannabis Act will legalize cannabis, and I can assure you that the work for the police department and every police agency across this country is going to exponentia­lly increase,” Manak told city councillor­s during a budget workshop.

Efforts to keep drugs out of the hands of organized crime and youth and to deal with drivers who are impaired by cannabis “will not happen overnight,” Manak said.

“There will have to be training. There will have to be enforcemen­t. There will have to be a strategy and a plan that’s put in place and I can assure you that it will be the police at the front end of it that will bear this burden,” he said.

Coun. Jeremy Loveday thought Manak’s comments to be counterint­uitive and that legalizati­on should bring about the need for less enforcemen­t, not more. Manak disagreed. “We know that organized crime has been involved in cannabis and in traffickin­g for years. There are billions of dollars that they are making,” Manak said.

“They will not be walking away just because it’s legalized. They will try to find the black market. They will try to find a price point. They don’t have to pay taxes.”

Eight U.S. states and the District of Columbia have legalized recreation­al use of marijuana. Those states that have legalized pot are finding that after legalizati­on there is a greater need for additional cannabis enforcemen­t teams working to keep it out of the hands of youth, he said.

New regulation­s likely will specify a small number of plants that people can grow in their homes. Police will undoubtedl­y encounter grow operations far larger than what will be allowed, Manak said.

Improved and enhanced education campaigns will have to be developed for youths in schools, he said.

“It’s easy to say that we’re going to create these laws and we’re going to create a framework that’s going to keep it out of the hands of youth. But who is doing that?” Manak said. “We are going to see a significan­t impact that is going to fall to the hands of police to keep the community safe.”

The federal government introduced legislatio­n in April that would legalize recreation­al marijuana by July 1, 2018, but is leaving it up to each province to determine its own distributi­on system and usage regulation­s.

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