News (Media Awareness Project) - CN NS: Tobacco Fines Stiffer Than Weed Penalties |
Title: | CN NS: Tobacco Fines Stiffer Than Weed Penalties |
Published On: | 2003-05-29 |
Source: | Halifax Herald (CN NS) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-20 06:05:56 |
TOBACCO FINES STIFFER THAN WEED PENALTIES
N.S. Smokers Face $2,000 For Cigarettes, Just $400 For Joints
Nova Scotians could face higher fines for puffing cigarettes in public than
smoking joints.
Proposed federal legislation unveiled Tuesday would eliminate criminal
penalties for possessing marijuana but impose fines ranging from $250 to
$400 or more.
Meanwhile, tobacco smokers who dare to light up in public places face
maximum $2,000 fines under Nova Scotia's tough new Smoke-free Places Act,
which came into effect in January.
Halifax bar owner and smoking-law opponent Victor Syperek said the
discrepancy points to the wrong-headedness of the provincial law.
"I think it's a perfect picture of just how ridiculous government is
sometimes," he said. "The cigarette (law) is a fanatical knee-jerk reaction
to something by people who like to control other people's lives. It has
nothing to do with smoking."
Provincial health officials said Tuesday they're unsure whether the
provincial law will have to be rewritten in light of the federal changes.
Right now, lone smokers aren't being nailed under the new provincial law,
said Nancy Hoddinott, co-ordinator of tobacco strategy in the Office of
Health Promotion.
"We are not at this point ticketing individuals," she said.
Instead, alcohol and gaming inspectors visiting establishments with liquor
licences, as well as agriculture and fishery inspectors in eating
establishments are warning businesses that aren't enforcing the smoking
law, she said.
Business owners and employers seem to be heeding the warnings, and no
tickets have been issued yet, said Ms. Hoddinott.
Business owners face stiffer fines under the act - $2,000 for a first
offence, $5,000 for a second offence and $10,000 on a third occasion.
The establishments could also potentially lose their liquor licence.
Lawyer Craig Clark, who this week successfully defended New Glasgow bar
employee Candace Mason against a charge under that town's anti-smoking
bylaw, said the proposed changes actually put pot smoking on a par with
tobacco and liquor offences.
"In New Glasgow, when they charge people that are strictly smoking, as
opposed to the proprietors who own the bar, I would say the fines are only
going to be in that range, $150 to $200," he said. "To me it looks like
they're going the right way in terms of the possession side of it."
But Mr. Clark pointed to another potential loophole in existing smoking laws.
He said the New Glasgow bylaw refers only to tobacco smoke.
"I guess the possibility looms . . . somebody could go into a bar and light
up a marijuana joint and be completely exempt from the New Glasgow town
bylaw but be (given) a ticket under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act
for having a marijuana joint," he said.
The same may be true of the provincial Smoke-free Places Act.
It states that " 'smoke' means to smoke, hold or otherwise have control
over ignited tobacco."
N.S. Smokers Face $2,000 For Cigarettes, Just $400 For Joints
Nova Scotians could face higher fines for puffing cigarettes in public than
smoking joints.
Proposed federal legislation unveiled Tuesday would eliminate criminal
penalties for possessing marijuana but impose fines ranging from $250 to
$400 or more.
Meanwhile, tobacco smokers who dare to light up in public places face
maximum $2,000 fines under Nova Scotia's tough new Smoke-free Places Act,
which came into effect in January.
Halifax bar owner and smoking-law opponent Victor Syperek said the
discrepancy points to the wrong-headedness of the provincial law.
"I think it's a perfect picture of just how ridiculous government is
sometimes," he said. "The cigarette (law) is a fanatical knee-jerk reaction
to something by people who like to control other people's lives. It has
nothing to do with smoking."
Provincial health officials said Tuesday they're unsure whether the
provincial law will have to be rewritten in light of the federal changes.
Right now, lone smokers aren't being nailed under the new provincial law,
said Nancy Hoddinott, co-ordinator of tobacco strategy in the Office of
Health Promotion.
"We are not at this point ticketing individuals," she said.
Instead, alcohol and gaming inspectors visiting establishments with liquor
licences, as well as agriculture and fishery inspectors in eating
establishments are warning businesses that aren't enforcing the smoking
law, she said.
Business owners and employers seem to be heeding the warnings, and no
tickets have been issued yet, said Ms. Hoddinott.
Business owners face stiffer fines under the act - $2,000 for a first
offence, $5,000 for a second offence and $10,000 on a third occasion.
The establishments could also potentially lose their liquor licence.
Lawyer Craig Clark, who this week successfully defended New Glasgow bar
employee Candace Mason against a charge under that town's anti-smoking
bylaw, said the proposed changes actually put pot smoking on a par with
tobacco and liquor offences.
"In New Glasgow, when they charge people that are strictly smoking, as
opposed to the proprietors who own the bar, I would say the fines are only
going to be in that range, $150 to $200," he said. "To me it looks like
they're going the right way in terms of the possession side of it."
But Mr. Clark pointed to another potential loophole in existing smoking laws.
He said the New Glasgow bylaw refers only to tobacco smoke.
"I guess the possibility looms . . . somebody could go into a bar and light
up a marijuana joint and be completely exempt from the New Glasgow town
bylaw but be (given) a ticket under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act
for having a marijuana joint," he said.
The same may be true of the provincial Smoke-free Places Act.
It states that " 'smoke' means to smoke, hold or otherwise have control
over ignited tobacco."
Member Comments |
No member comments available...