Pubdate: Thu, 09 Apr 2009 Source: Georgia Straight, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 The Georgia Straight Contact: http://www.straight.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1084 Author: Jayce Sale Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09/n338/a03.html BILL C-15'S CANNABIS CLAUSE POINTLESSLY HARSH We should all be concerned about the Conservatives' attempt to pass Bill C-15 ["Bill C-15 could fill prisons", March 26-April 2], which will impose mandatory minimum sentencing for growing and trafficking marijuana and other drug offenses. This war-on-drugs approach will no doubt do more harm than good. It's a failed policy that could ensnare not just those involved in organized crime but medical-marijuana users, who in many cases are merely trying to deal with living with debilitating and serious illnesses. The Conservatives and Liberals who are supporting the bill may claim that it is only gang members and violent offenders that this is meant to target, but when it comes to actual enforcement, do we really think that police are going to discriminate? More likely they might find a person growing a few plants in a closet and arrest them regardless of their motives. What if that person is someone with chronic pain, HIV, or multiple sclerosis, and they are growing marijuana for medicine because it's the only thing that is effective in alleviating their symptoms? Should that person really be forced to face a sentence of six months in prison for this "crime"? At the B.C. Compassion Club Society, a nonprofit medical-marijuana dispensary and holistic wellness centre where I work, we often see the effects of cannabis prohibition on our members and society at large. People with legitimate medical reasons for using cannabis are arrested, kicked out of their apartments, and fired from jobs. This is criminalizing and stigmatizing some of society's poorest and sickest members. At the BCCCS, we believe in an individual's right to choose the form of medicine they use and to do so without the threat of prosecution and imprisonment. The evidence is clear on all fronts: that marijuana is a safe and effective medicine for treating an incredible range of illnesses and conditions, and that throwing someone in jail for growing a few plants serves no end in deterring crime and dealing with drug use in society. Jayce Sale Vancouver - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin