Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Liberals Introduce Long-Awaited Bills To Legalize Marijuana By July 2018

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Apr, 2017 01:38 PM
    OTTAWA — Adults aged 18 and older will be legally allowed to buy and cultivate a limited quantity of marijuana for personal use under a long-awaited suite of bills introduced Thursday by the federal Liberal government.
     
    The package of legislation was introduced in the House of Commons by Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale, Health Minister Jane Philpott and Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland.
     
    The new legislation would, once passed, establish a "strict legal framework" for the production, sale, distribution and possession of pot, and make it a specific criminal offence to sell cannabis to a minor.
     
    Adults over 18 would be allowed to possess up to 30 grams of dried cannabis or its equivalent in public, share up to 30 grams of dried marijuana with other adults and buy cannabis or cannabis oil from a provincially regulated retailer.  
     
    They would also be permitted to grow up to four plants per resident for personal use, as well as make legal cannabis-containing products at home.
     
    Penalties for illegal pot possession, production, distribution and sales would range from a ticket to a maximum of 14 years in prison.
     
    The government says it intends to bring other products, including pot-infused edibles, into the legalized sphere once federal regulations for production and sale are developed and brought into force.
     
    Under the proposed Cannabis Act, it would remain illegal to import cannabis and cannabis products, and to export them without a valid permit. Permits may be issued for certain purposes, such as medical cannabis and industrial hemp.
     
    The government also aims to establish "significant penalties" for those who engage young Canadians in "cannabis-related offences" and a "zero-tolerance approach" to drug-impaired driving, along with a "robust" public awareness campaign.
     
    The RCMP and the Canadian Border Services Agency plan to work together, along with local police, to uphold laws governing illegal cross-border movement of cannabis.
     
    It would also provide additional investment for licensing, inspection and enforcement challenges.
     
    Provinces, territories and municipalities would be able to tailor rules for their own jurisdictions, enforcing them through mechanisms such as ticketing.
     
    They will also be permitted to set their own licensing, distribution and retail sales rules, establish provincial zoning rules for cannabis businesses and change provincial traffic safety laws as they deem necessary.
     
    Philpott says criminalizing cannabis has not deterred use among young people, noting products like alcohol and tobacco are legally available with restrictions.
     
    Once passed, the Liberal bills introduced today would make Canada the first member of the G7 to legalize marijuana for recreational use across the country.
     
    SOME OF THE HIGHLIGHTS FROM THURSDAY'S SUITE OF LIBERAL POT-LEGALIZATION BILLS
     
    — Sales to be restricted to people age 18 and older, although provinces would have the jurisdiction to increase their own minimum age.
     
    — Adults 18 and older would be allowed to publicly possess up to 30 grams of dried cannabis, or its equivalent in non-dried form.
     
    — Sales by mail or courier through a federally licensed producer would be allowed in provinces that lack a regulated retail system.
     
    — Adults aged 18 and older would be allowed to grow up to four cannabis plants for each residence, with plants not to exceed one metre in height.
     
    — Adults aged 18 and older would also be allowed to produce legal cannabis products, such as food or drinks, for personal use at home.
     
    — At first, sales will entail only fresh and dried cannabis, cannabis oils and seeds and plants for cultivation. Sales of edibles will come later, once regulations for production and sale can be developed.
     
    — Possession, production and distribution outside the legal system would remain illegal, as would imports or exports without a federal permit. Such permits will cover only limited purposes, such as medical or scientific cannabis and industrial hemp.
     
    — Travellers entering Canada would still be subject to inspections for prohibited goods, including cannabis.
     
    — The existing program for access to medical marijuana would continue as it currently exists.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Doctor Says He Was Too Obese To Rub His Penis On Patients

    Ontario Doctor Says He Was Too Obese To Rub His Penis On Patients
    Two patients alleged Dr. Rodion Andrew Kunynetz pressed his genitals against their legs during the course of an examination.

    Ontario Doctor Says He Was Too Obese To Rub His Penis On Patients

    Health Canada Seizes Infertility, Breast Cancer Drugs Sold Online

    Health Canada Seizes Infertility, Breast Cancer Drugs Sold Online
    The agency says it has seized 10 products from EPCA Shipping Inc., which it says is the Canadian distributor for Extreme Peptides, a company that sells health products online.

    Health Canada Seizes Infertility, Breast Cancer Drugs Sold Online

    First Nations business forum to discuss BC resource opportunities

    First Nations business forum to discuss BC resource opportunities
    First Nations leaders have been calling for greater involvement in the resource enterprises which take place on their territories, says BC Assembly of First Nations

    First Nations business forum to discuss BC resource opportunities

    DARPAN’s 10 with Sergeant Jag Khosa

    DARPAN’s 10 with Sergeant Jag Khosa
    Prevention, education and awareness is the key to prevent our next generation from getting into gangs. Enforcement also plays a huge role in holding those accountable who pose the highest risk to public safety. 

    DARPAN’s 10 with Sergeant Jag Khosa

    Two-year-old Boy Dies After Being Hit By Vehicle On Rural B.C. Property

    Two-year-old Boy Dies After Being Hit By Vehicle On Rural B.C. Property
    North Okanagan RCMP Const. Jocelyn Noseworthy issued a news release saying the two-year-old boy was hit by a vehicle Monday afternoon.

    Two-year-old Boy Dies After Being Hit By Vehicle On Rural B.C. Property

    B.C. Man Shot By Police Repeatedly Stabbed Himself Before Shooting: Witnesses

    Naverone Woods, 23, was shot inside the Safeway by officers on the morning of Dec. 28, 2014, and died after he was taken to hospital.

    B.C. Man Shot By Police Repeatedly Stabbed Himself Before Shooting: Witnesses