Despite some politicians hailing the Senateâs decision to pass the federal governmentâs plan to legalize cannabis as a âhistoricâ moment for Canada, not everyone is happy about the impending legislation.
Pot activist Jodie Emery says she is âdistressedâ by the Liberal governmentâs Bill C-45.
The law, which still requires Royal Assent by the Crown before it can be enacted, is expected to come into force as early as mid-September. It will allow Canadian adults to legally possess and use small amounts of recreational marijuana and sets out parametres on growing, distributing, selling, and possessing the drug, along with safety standards.
Emery, who is married to the self-proclaimed âPrince of Potâ Marc Emery, says that the headlines concerning Canadaâs legalization of cannabis are ultimately good, but the legislationâs details leave much to be desired.
â[Bill] C-45 introduces 45 new cannabis offences with maximums going up to 14 years, equating cannabis to pornography with children, terrorism, and assaulting police,â she told ŰÎŰ´ŤĂ˝ Channel on Wednesday.
The pot activist listed fines for smoking cannabis in public, penalties for having home-grown plants visible in B.C., and eviction for smoking in a rental apartment as examples of restrictive policies under the new plan.
âThere are so many, so many problems that I find it very hard to celebrate today being a criminal for cannabis alongside hundreds of thousands of others,â she explained.
Emery and her husband were convicted of a number of drug-related charges in 2017. The couple owned the brand Cannabis Culture, under which a number of franchised pot dispensaries operated. They were fined $195,000 each, and given two yearsâ probation with conditions.
âFor me and so many others, we wake up today seeing nothing different. Weâre still criminals in the eyes of the government,â she said. âIâm still being punished.â
Emery said Bill C-45 fails to explain what will happen to those who have already been convicted of cannabis-related crimes.
âThe civil liberties advocates, the lawyers, the people who represent marginalized, Indigenous youth, the poor, all of the victims of prohibition, we arenât celebrating today,â she said. âWhereâs our apology? Whereâs our amnesty? Itâs nowhere to be found.â
Bill Blair, parliamentary secretary to the ministers of health and justice and the governmentâs point person on the cannabis file, said theyâre currently focused on repealing and replacing the existing legislation before they can turn their attention to Canadians who already have criminal records for pot-related offences.
âThe law remains in effect until itâs repealed and replaced⌠any discussion of those records canât take place until that process is complete,â he told reporters in the foyer of the House of Commons on Wednesday. âIt will then be possible for the government to turn its mind to the issue of the existing records or any disparity that exists there.â
When asked if the government was âopenâ to the possibility of pardoning those with existing records, Blair responded that it was âprematureâ to say.
Iâm sorry to say I cannot celebrate.
â Jodie Emery (@JodieEmery)
There are now 45 new federal cannabis offences & many harsher penalties under . Pardons & amnesty arenât included. Criminalization & govât anti-pot propaganda continue.
But the âlegalization passesâ headline is a good message, at least.