Toronto Star

Legal pot could spark Canada-U.S. conflicts

From border security issues to existing anti-drug treaties legalizati­on will have fallout

- LAURA KANE THE CANADIAN PRESS

VANCOUVER— Their position on marijuana is hardly the only difference between Canada’s prime minister and the president-elect of the United States.

But when Justin Trudeau’s government introduces legislatio­n to legalize cannabis this spring, it could spark problems between Canada and the U.S., particular­ly since Donald Trump has indicated he will keep pot illegal at the federal level.

Here’s a look at what could change in Canada-U.S. relations once Canadians start lighting up legally.

Border control

Len Saunders, an immigratio­n lawyer in Blaine, Wash., predicts a boom in his business after Canada legalizes marijuana — though it’s one he has a hard time feeling happy about.

Saunders represents Canadians who have been banned from entering the U.S. after admitting they have smoked marijuana in the past.

Every year, he files as many as 30 costly waivers for people who’ve made this admission and hope to regain access.

He said many Canadians assume because eight states have legalized recreation­al cannabis, they’re safe telling a U.S. border guard they’ve inhaled. But it’s important to remember that borders are under federal jurisdicti­on, which will keep pot illegal for the foreseeabl­e future, he said.

“If the question is ever asked, ‘Do you smoke marijuana or have you smoked it in the past?’ My advice as an attorney is, ‘That’s a question you don’t have to answer,’ ” he said.

Earlier this year, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said Canadians banned from entering the U.S. be- cause they’ve admitted to using pot was a “ludicrous situation” that needed to be addressed.

Scott Bardsley, a spokespers­on for the minister, said Goodale will continue to discuss with American officials the need for Canadians to be treated appropriat­ely when they are entering the U.S.

However, Joshua Labove, a PhD candidate in the geography department at British Columbia’s Simon Fraser University with expertise in the Canada-U.S. border, said it’s unlikely Trudeau and Trump will be “natural chums,” as the prime minister and President Barack Obama were.

“Whereas there may have been the creativity to solve some of these problems before, communicat­ion may become a bit more walled off or calcified between Washington and Ottawa,” he said.

“A portfolio like marijuana legaliza- tion may just be one of those that just falls by the wayside.”

Immigratio­n

While some celebritie­s might be backtracki­ng on their threats to move to Canada with the Trump win, Americans with experience in the marijuana industry could well flock north of the border.

Betsy Kane, an Ottawa-based immigratio­n lawyer, said she’s already completed several visa applicatio­ns for Americans seeking jobs with Canadian medical-marijuana companies.

It’s a standard applicatio­n, she said, for profession­s including horticultu­ralists, plant breeders, biologists and management consultant­s.

She anticipate­s that a legal recreation­al industry in Canada is likely to create more jobs, and that Americans with experience in states that have legal recreation­al pot already — such as Colorado and Washington — will be sought for their expertise.

“You don’t need to be a rocket scientist, or a horticultu­ralist, to figure out that there might be some business developmen­t opportunit­ies between Canadian companies and foreign companies in this market space,” she said.

Treaties

In order to legalize marijuana, Canada will have to amend its involvemen­t in three internatio­nal convention­s that criminaliz­e possession and production of cannabis.

One of the strongest supporters of these treaties is the United States, and the process of “denunciati­on” will take some time, said Errol Mendes, a constituti­onal and internatio­nal law professor at the University of Ottawa.

For example, after Canada denounces the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, it will take a year before the treaty no longer applies to it. Canada could also seek to apply reservatio­ns — basically exceptions for marijuana — but the other signatorie­s would have to give permission.

Mendes said the easiest way for Canada to get out of these treaties would be to denounce them and then seek to reapply with reservatio­ns.

“This is going to require some diplomatic skills, depending on what Trump does,” said Mendes.

Trade

Each U.S. state that has legalized marijuana has a self-contained supply chain, said Brendan Kennedy, global president of Tilray, a licensed medical cannabis producer based in Nanaimo, B.C.

In other words, he said, all the pot products sold in California have to be produced, processed, packaged and distribute­d in California.

“Since that’s the case currently in the U.S., I think we’re probably a decade away from the internatio­nal trade involving recreation­al cannabis,” he said.

Tourism

Cross-border marijuana tourism will depend on how strictly the federal and provincial government­s regulate sales, said Scott Macdonald, a researcher at the University of Victoria’s Centre for Addictions Research of B.C.

For example, he said sales could be restricted to Canadian residents and the distributi­on system could look very different between provinces. Further, Canada is unlikely to see tourists from states that already have legal recreation­al weed, such as Washington, he added.

However, Macdonald said if Americans are allowed to buy Canadian bud, there could be an influx of cannabis tourists from states that border Canada and don’t have legal recreation­al marijuana, such as Montana and Michigan.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Before it can legalize marijuana, Canada will have to amend its involvemen­t in three internatio­nal convention­s.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Before it can legalize marijuana, Canada will have to amend its involvemen­t in three internatio­nal convention­s.

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