Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Don't Take Pot On International Flights, Transport Minister Warns

The Canadian Press, 04 Oct, 2018 11:57 AM
    OTTAWA — Canada's transport minister says travellers aboard domestic flights will be allowed to carry a small quantity of cannabis with them after Oct. 17.
     
     
    But Marc Garneau warns against packing it into luggage that's destined outside the country. And the country's airport screening authority says it has yet to finalize procedures for dealing with passengers taking pot through security lines.
     
     
    Garneau says as long as they are on domestic flights, Canadians can bring up to 30 grams of marijuana with them once possession for personal use becomes legal.
     
     
    The minister warns, however, that international passengers should not carry cannabis.
     
     
    Transport Canada says taking cannabis, or products that contain pot, across the U.S. border remains illegal.
     
     
    While several American states have legalized marijuana, possession of the drug is still illegal under U.S. federal law.
     
     
    In addition, export and import of cannabis remains illegal no matter which country you travel to. For example, if a traveller leaves from the Montreal airport for Amsterdam, they will not be allowed to bring cannabis with them on the plane or in checked luggage.
     
     
    "As long as the flight is domestic, then people are allowed to bring up to a certain quantity for their personal use," Garneau told reporters in Ottawa on Tuesday.
     
     
    Under Bill C-45, Canadian adults will be allowed to carry up to 30 grams of dried cannabis in public.
     
     
    The Canadian Air Transport Safety Authority said Tuesday it is still working to ensure its rules conform with the law.
     
     
    "We have been working with Transport Canada since the government passed the cannabis legislation to ensure our protocols are consistent with government policy," said CATSA spokeswoman Christine Langlois.
     
     
    "We expect to finalize our procedures in the coming days."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Burned Out Vehicle Connected To Surrey, B.C. Stabbing Is Found

    Burned Out Vehicle Connected To Surrey, B.C. Stabbing Is Found
    Homicide investigators in British Columbia say a vehicle related to the stabbing death of 20-year old Leonardo Ngo in Surrey has been found.

    Burned Out Vehicle Connected To Surrey, B.C. Stabbing Is Found

    Man Killed In Vancouver Road Rage Incident Identified As 33-Yr-Old Willis Charles Hunt

    Man Killed In Vancouver Road Rage Incident Identified As 33-Yr-Old Willis Charles Hunt
    The VPD has identified the victim of the city’s 14th homicide as 33-year-old Vancouver resident Willis Charles Hunt.

    Man Killed In Vancouver Road Rage Incident Identified As 33-Yr-Old Willis Charles Hunt

    Five People Sent To Hospital After Crash At Abbotsford, B.C., Airport

    Five People Sent To Hospital After Crash At Abbotsford, B.C., Airport
    Five people are in hospital, including one in critical condition, after a 1930s era biplane crashed shortly after take off Saturday at the Abbotsford International Airport in British Columbia.

    Five People Sent To Hospital After Crash At Abbotsford, B.C., Airport

    Police Ask For Help To Locate Missing Abbotsford Man MITER SINGH

    Police Ask For Help To Locate Missing Abbotsford Man MITER SINGH
    The Abbotsford Police Department is requesting the public’s assistance in locating 44 year-old Mr. Miter SINGH.

    Police Ask For Help To Locate Missing Abbotsford Man MITER SINGH

    Children Born To Spies In Canada Should Not Be Handed Citizenship: Ottawa

     Russian spies lurking in the Canadian shadows may toil in secret, but they're still employees of Moscow — and therefore their children are not Canadian citizens, the federal government is telling the Supreme Court.

    Children Born To Spies In Canada Should Not Be Handed Citizenship: Ottawa

    Wildfire Crews Brace For Weather Change As 39 New Fires Recorded In B.C.

    More wildfires are burning in British Columbia in 2018 than in past years but the total amount of timber burned is well below average, a wildfire official says.

    Wildfire Crews Brace For Weather Change As 39 New Fires Recorded In B.C.