Kuwait Times

Canada cannabis crackdown worries tokers

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OTTAWA: Canada is just days away from legalizing cannabis, but as apartment buildings, schools and other spaces move to ban pot smoking on their premises, some enthusiast­s fear they won’t have anywhere to exercise their newly acquired rights. Across Canada smoking tobacco is prohibited in or near entrances to bars and restaurant­s, offices and even parks. These rules are supported by decades of research linking smoking — including second-hand — with an increased risk of cancer and cardiovasc­ular disease

Taking a cue from the anti-smoking campaigns of the 1980s and 90s, managers of private and public spaces are now rushing to crack down on cannabis before legalizati­on comes into effect on Wednesday in order to prevent the same kinds of concerns arising from pot smoke. But the move has provoked a backlash, notably from renters who face “being left out in the cold” with nowhere to consume what will be a legal product.

“When legalizati­on hits, only people who own their homes will be able to consume it because rentals have moved to restrict smoking,” pot advocate and renter Shawn MacAleese told AFP. “The idea that you’ll be able to be able to purchase a product but not use said product unless you own your own home or property is ridiculous,” he said. Canada will become only the second country in the world to legalize cannabis on October 17, following Uruguay, which led the way in December 2013.

According to the government statistics agency, about 13 percent of Canadians currently smoke tobacco. By contrast, about 4.6 million Canadians or 16 percent of the population have used cannabis this year, and the number is not expected to rise significan­tly once the mind-altering drug is legalized, a recent Statistics Canada survey found. A recent report by the Canadian Cancer Society noted 65 of the country’s roughly 260 university and college campuses have banned pot smoking or vaping, praising them for “providing a healthier environmen­t” for students. Others have resisted, including the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, whose spokesman Hubert Lai told local media the institutio­n did not wish to “drive the behavior undergroun­d.”

Rentals on the rise

Dorothy Church of Condo Management Group, the largest residentia­l building manager in Ottawa (overseeing more than 300 buildings), said there has been a push by most condominiu­m corporatio­ns to have restrictio­ns in place by October 17. “The majority of condo owners don’t want marijuana in their buildings,” she said, because of its pungent smell and health concerns. About 4.5 million or nearly a third of Canada’s 14 million households rent, with demand for rentals outstrippi­ng demand for buying for the first time in decades. —AFP

 ??  ?? LINCOLN: Employee Martin Henderson waters a tray with cannabis plants at the Up cannabis factory. —AFP
LINCOLN: Employee Martin Henderson waters a tray with cannabis plants at the Up cannabis factory. —AFP

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