Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Marijuana Still Illegal For Now In Canada, As Is Driving On Drugs: Justice Minister

The Canadian Press, 20 Jun, 2018 11:42 AM
    OTTAWA — The federal government is basking in the glow of its newly realized plan to legalize marijuana, but it is reminding Canadians that pot remains illegal in this country until the Cannabis Act goes into effect.
     
     
    The government's companion legislation on impaired driving is also expected to pass soon, said Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould, but she added that driving under the influence of drugs has always been — and will remain — against the law in Canada.
     
     
    "I urge all Canadians to continue to follow the existing law until the Cannabis Act comes into force," Wilson-Raybould told a news conference Wednesday in the foyer of the House of Commons.
     
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who has a news conference of his own scheduled for later in the day, was expected to provide more details on precisely when that might be.
     
     
    Bill C-46, a companion bill that Wilson-Raybould predicts will give Canada the strongest impaired-driving rules in the world, will also become law "in the near future," she said.
     
     
    Until then, "I would like to also remind the public that driving while impaired by drugs is, and will remain, illegal."
     
     
     
     
    It was clear, however, that there are still more questions than answers about what Canada's nascent legal-pot landscape will look like — how police will test motorists, what to do about those with prior marijuana convictions and just how the rules governing home cultivation will work.
     
     
    Quebec and Manitoba have already decided to ban home-grown pot, even though the federal bill specifies that individuals can grow up to four plants per dwelling.
     
     
    On Tuesday, the Senate voted to end its opposition to certain aspects of the federal bill, most notably the plan to permit Canadians to cultivate marijuana plants at home. A proposed Senate amendment would have prevented legal challenges to their constitutional right to do so.
     
     
    Wilson-Raybould called the legislation — which still requires royal assent to become law — "transformative" and predicted it would protect young people and keep organized crime out of the pot market.
     
     
    "C-45 marks a wholesale shift in how our country approaches cannabis," she said. 
     
     
    "It leaves behind a failed model of prohibition, a model that has made organized crime rich and young people vulnerable.... our shift in policy will protect youth from the health and safety risks of cannabis and keep those same criminals from profiting from its production, distribution and sale."
     
     
    Senators last week approved almost four dozen amendments to C-45. The government accepted 27 of them and tweaked two others. But it rejected 13 amendments.
     
     
     
     
    Conservative Sen. Claude Carignan attempted Tuesday to have the home-grow amendment reinstated — which would have sent the bill back to the House of Commons and could have set the stage for a protracted parliamentary battle between the two houses of Parliament.
     
     
    But senators voted 45-35 not to insist on that change.
     
     
    Sen. Yuen Pau Woo, leader of the independent group of senators, said C-45 was "a bit of a stress test" for the new, less partisan Senate.
     
     
    "I think the new Senate came out very well. We worked very hard on reviewing the bill, proposing amendments" but ultimately deferred to the will of the elected House of Commons, as unelected senators should, he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CCPA Report Calls For Expansion Of Pension Regulations

    CCPA Report Calls For Expansion Of Pension Regulations
    OTTAWA — A report by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives recommends that payments to shareholders such as dividends and share buybacks by companies should be limited if their pension plans are underfunded.

    CCPA Report Calls For Expansion Of Pension Regulations

    Quebec Man Sentenced To Life In Stabbing Of Grocery Clerk Appealing Verdict

    Quebec Man Sentenced To Life In Stabbing Of Grocery Clerk Appealing Verdict
    Defence lawyer Julie Giroux filed the appeal Monday and asked the court to either declare her client not criminally responsible due to a mental disorder or to order a new trial.

    Quebec Man Sentenced To Life In Stabbing Of Grocery Clerk Appealing Verdict

    Pakistan Punjab CM Shehbaz Sharif Writes To Amarinder Singh, Seeks Cooperation To Combat Smog

    Pakistan Punjab CM Shehbaz Sharif Writes To Amarinder Singh, Seeks Cooperation To Combat Smog
      Pakistan's Punjab province chief minister Shehbaz Sharif has suggested to his Indian Punjab counterpart a regional cooperation arrangement to tackle the issue of smog as well as pollution.

    Pakistan Punjab CM Shehbaz Sharif Writes To Amarinder Singh, Seeks Cooperation To Combat Smog

    Search Teams, Helicopter Scour Rugged Coquitlam Area For Missing Dogwalker

    Search Teams, Helicopter Scour Rugged Coquitlam Area For Missing Dogwalker
    Searchers from across Metro Vancouver are scouring a rugged area in Coquitlam for a woman and three dogs she was walking.

    Search Teams, Helicopter Scour Rugged Coquitlam Area For Missing Dogwalker

    Report Calls On Federal And Provincial Policies To Address Child Poverty In B.C.

    Report Calls On Federal And Provincial Policies To Address Child Poverty In B.C.
    A coalition of child and youth advocates says one in five children in British Columbia lives in poverty, but immigrant kids, off-reserve Indigenous kids and those from visible minority backgrounds are even worse off.

    Report Calls On Federal And Provincial Policies To Address Child Poverty In B.C.

    Booklet, Pamphlet On 'Love Jihad' Distributed At Spiritual Fair In Jaipur

    Booklet, Pamphlet On 'Love Jihad' Distributed At Spiritual Fair In Jaipur
    The pamphlets, carrying a picture of a Bollywood actress, warned people against 'love jihad' and also claimed that two Muslim actors had left their Hindu wives.

    Booklet, Pamphlet On 'Love Jihad' Distributed At Spiritual Fair In Jaipur