It’s past time to decriminalize simple possession of narcotics
The Star
Arthur Cockfield
June 30th, 2019
The Star
Arthur Cockfield
June 30th, 2019
Read the full story here.With cannabis legalization already a hazy memory, political momentum is building to consider the decriminalization of simple possession of all narcotics. Under decriminalization, administrative fines could be issued for possession of small amounts of drugs, but no criminal sanctions would follow. Illicit drug trafficking would remain a crime.
Last April, B.C.’s provincial health officer, Dr. Bonnie Henry, published a report recommending this step. And last week, a parliamentary health committee recommended decriminalization. A member of this committee, Liberal MP Nathaniel Erskine-Smith (one of my former students), then introduced a decriminalization bill (Bill C-460) in Parliament. The gesture may be symbolic, however, because so far his own government disagrees with this approach.
Yet there are powerful reasons to move to decriminalization.
First, Canada is undergoing its most serious public health crisis since the Spanish influenza of 1917. In the past two and a half years, over 10,000 Canadians have died from overdosing opioids like fentanyl. Overdose deaths are now so prevalent that Canadian life expectancy at birth has stopped rising.
In a Judeo-Christian culture that privileges abstinence and purity of mind and body, these addicts are the fallen, and as such can be easily dismissed and forgotten. As detailed in Dr. Henry’s report, it is the stigma and possible criminal sanctions that discourages drug users from seeking medical help that could save their lives. For instance, Portugal has had great success in reducing overdose deaths since it decriminalized drug possession in 2001.