News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: PUB LTE: Revised Drug-Penalty Legislation Remains Flawed |
Title: | CN BC: PUB LTE: Revised Drug-Penalty Legislation Remains Flawed |
Published On: | 2009-12-31 |
Source: | Nanaimo News Bulletin (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2010-01-25 23:39:04 |
REVISED DRUG-PENALTY LEGISLATION REMAINS FLAWED
To the Editor,
Re: Bill would tilt justice scales, Opinion, Dec. 22.
You opined that the Senate amendments to Bill C-15 (mandatory jail
terms for drug offences) were a welcome change to allow judges to
differentiate between small and larger-scale marijuana production offences.
I agree with the sentiment. But even with the Senate amendments, Bill
C-15 will impose mandatory nine-month jail terms for even one
cannabis plant grown for the purpose of trafficking if it happens in
a rental house or if a potential risk of danger to the public is
created in a residential area.
And trafficking includes non-commercial transfers to friends or family.
The bill remains a radical change in Canada's approach to drugs. It
is the importation of a drug-war mentality that used to be prevalent
in the United States. They are now abandoning this approach, having
seen the catastrophic consequences.
All of the evidence is that such measures are doomed to fail. And to
produce tragic consequences such as increased violence in the
prohibition markets and a boost to the coffers of organized crime.
Canada is being sold a bill of goods. The Conservatives know C-15
won't reduce drug supply, drug demand or street violence.
They put pennies into proven success like treatment and prevention
yet are willing to spend billions of our dollars locking up Canadians
and further marginalizing those dealing with problematic substance use.
The only way to reduce the power of gangs, end the phenomena of
basement marijuana production and to bring some sanity and compassion
to our drug situation, is to radically re-evaluate our approach, not
make a bad situation worse.
Kirk Tousaw
Mill Bay
To the Editor,
Re: Bill would tilt justice scales, Opinion, Dec. 22.
You opined that the Senate amendments to Bill C-15 (mandatory jail
terms for drug offences) were a welcome change to allow judges to
differentiate between small and larger-scale marijuana production offences.
I agree with the sentiment. But even with the Senate amendments, Bill
C-15 will impose mandatory nine-month jail terms for even one
cannabis plant grown for the purpose of trafficking if it happens in
a rental house or if a potential risk of danger to the public is
created in a residential area.
And trafficking includes non-commercial transfers to friends or family.
The bill remains a radical change in Canada's approach to drugs. It
is the importation of a drug-war mentality that used to be prevalent
in the United States. They are now abandoning this approach, having
seen the catastrophic consequences.
All of the evidence is that such measures are doomed to fail. And to
produce tragic consequences such as increased violence in the
prohibition markets and a boost to the coffers of organized crime.
Canada is being sold a bill of goods. The Conservatives know C-15
won't reduce drug supply, drug demand or street violence.
They put pennies into proven success like treatment and prevention
yet are willing to spend billions of our dollars locking up Canadians
and further marginalizing those dealing with problematic substance use.
The only way to reduce the power of gangs, end the phenomena of
basement marijuana production and to bring some sanity and compassion
to our drug situation, is to radically re-evaluate our approach, not
make a bad situation worse.
Kirk Tousaw
Mill Bay
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