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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Jail Too Stiff For Growers?
Title:CN BC: Jail Too Stiff For Growers?
Published On:2007-12-15
Source:Burnaby Now, The (CN BC)
Fetched On:2008-01-10 22:48:25
JAIL TOO STIFF FOR GROWERS?

A plan to put more pot growers behind bars has a Burnaby activist
smoking mad.

Adam Scriven said a handful of people will gather outside Burnaby-New
Westminster MP Peter Julian's office Monday, part of a nationwide day
of protest against mandatory jail sentences proposed by the
Conservative government.

Introduced last month, Bill C-26 includes a one-year mandatory prison
sentence for those dealing marijuana while involved with organized
crime or using a weapon. It also includes two-year prison sentences
for those running a grow operation of 500 plants or more.

Scriven, a stay-at-home dad, says the bill won't reduce grow
operations or drug violence.

"Mandatory minimums don't work," Scriven said in interview
Thursday.

"This is taking us to an American-style drug policy."

Scriven also said grow operations are only dangerous because they
aren't inspected.

"There's nothing different about growing pot than growing any other
plant," Scriven said. "You could have the exact same fires if you were
improperly growing tomatoes."

By legalizing pot, the government would take profits away from crooks
and reduce the violence associated with Canada's drug trade, he said.

"People don't get shot up for codeine. People don't get shot up for
Aspirin," Scriven added.

"Why give them a gold mine when you could sell it for the price of
coffee?"

Burnaby MPs say they will vote against the bill.

Bill Siksay, NDP MP for Burnaby Douglas, says similar laws have
already failed in the U.S.

"They fill up the prisons, they disrupt families, but they don't solve
the problem," Siksay said in an interview Thursday.

"We've given fare to many people's criminal records for marijuana use,
and we've clogged the courts for way too long."

Instead, the government should decriminalize marijuana, Siksay
said.

"We need to upset the apple cart when it comes to drug policy, he
added.

Peter Juilan, NDP MP for Burnaby New Westminster, agreed, saying the
federal government should spend more money on front line policing.

"The bill is the wrong approach to take," he added.

James Moore, Conservative MP for Port Moody-Coquitlam-Port Coquitlam,
did not return phone calls Friday,

But Rob Nicholson, the Ontario MP who introduced the bill, said the
bill sends a message to crooks that the government won't tolerate drug
trafficking.

"Drug producers and dealers who threaten the safety of our communities
must face tougher penalties," Nicholson said in a news release.

"That's why our government is moving to impose mandatory jail time for
serious drug offenses that involve organized crime, violence or youth."

The bill also included a mandatory two-year jail sentence for dealing
drugs such as cocaine, heroin or methamphetamines to youth, or for
dealing those drugs in places normally frequented by youth.

It would increase the maximum penalty for pot production from seven to
14 years, and includes tougher penalties for trafficking date-rape
drugs.

A 2004 addiction survey found the number of Canadians who reported
using an injection drug at some point in their life rose to 4.1
million in 2004 from 1.7 million in 1994. The release also states that
cash, guns and cocaine are smuggled into Canada in exchange for
locally grown marijuana.
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