Thomas Davie
Bluelight Crew
This is going to be a biggish post. Sorry; I'll try to format it properly
Anne McClellan, Liberal, a former health minister/former justice minister/former public safety minister has been tapped to head up a task force overseeing legalization, regulation and taxation of MJ for adult recreational purposes in Canada. To some extent, this sidelines Bill Blair (also liberal) who is coordinating the effort at the federal level between the Health, Justice and Public Safety ministries. Bill Blair used to be chief of police in Toronto.
1. This task force has to be established and named by June 23rd when our parliament breaks for the summer. This task force will liason between the provinces/territories and the federal government. Expect it to be loaded with provincial health, justice and public safety ministers. A lot of interprovincial wrangling will occur.
2. 9 weeks later, on August 25th, new laws will be handed down regarding medical Marijuana access in Canada. This is in response to a court ruling declaring that patient rights were negatively affected by the prohibition on personal cultivation. Trudeau and the federal justice minister have to respond to the court's ruling and come up with a system of medical cannabis regulation in this country that doesn't impact and negatively take away the charter rights of medical cannabis patients and their providers." In response to the law being struck down which prevents mmj patients from growing their own.
-probably all medical patients will be allowed to grow.
-LP's (licensed providers) may be allowed to operate physical stores
-patients may be able to split their purchasing amongst multiple LP's (it really sucks when your LP is out of something that works for you, and you're prevented from accessing MJ at another LP)
3. On September 19th (3 1/2 weeks from the reworked medical laws, Parliament resumes)
4. October 31-November 4, the federal/provincial task force has to present a report to the Health/Justice/Public safety triumvirate. They've had ~17 weeks since formation and ~9 1/2 weeks since the reworked medical laws. At this point, Parliament has a basic set of recommendations for a country wide legal framework.There’s going to be a tremendous amount of back and forth between the province/feds and lots of headaches to share; taxation, age restrictions, limitations on possession, whether or not personal cultivation is going to be allowed, interprovincial transfer of MJ, restrictions on sales
So, things are finally starting to happen quicklier
A good barometer of forthcoming national legalization will be the new medical laws released in August. Those laws, and the adult recreational system which will follow will be designed to resist (as much as possible) the inevitable legal challenges.
Tom
Anne McClellan, Liberal, a former health minister/former justice minister/former public safety minister has been tapped to head up a task force overseeing legalization, regulation and taxation of MJ for adult recreational purposes in Canada. To some extent, this sidelines Bill Blair (also liberal) who is coordinating the effort at the federal level between the Health, Justice and Public Safety ministries. Bill Blair used to be chief of police in Toronto.
1. This task force has to be established and named by June 23rd when our parliament breaks for the summer. This task force will liason between the provinces/territories and the federal government. Expect it to be loaded with provincial health, justice and public safety ministers. A lot of interprovincial wrangling will occur.
2. 9 weeks later, on August 25th, new laws will be handed down regarding medical Marijuana access in Canada. This is in response to a court ruling declaring that patient rights were negatively affected by the prohibition on personal cultivation. Trudeau and the federal justice minister have to respond to the court's ruling and come up with a system of medical cannabis regulation in this country that doesn't impact and negatively take away the charter rights of medical cannabis patients and their providers." In response to the law being struck down which prevents mmj patients from growing their own.
-probably all medical patients will be allowed to grow.
-LP's (licensed providers) may be allowed to operate physical stores
-patients may be able to split their purchasing amongst multiple LP's (it really sucks when your LP is out of something that works for you, and you're prevented from accessing MJ at another LP)
3. On September 19th (3 1/2 weeks from the reworked medical laws, Parliament resumes)
4. October 31-November 4, the federal/provincial task force has to present a report to the Health/Justice/Public safety triumvirate. They've had ~17 weeks since formation and ~9 1/2 weeks since the reworked medical laws. At this point, Parliament has a basic set of recommendations for a country wide legal framework.There’s going to be a tremendous amount of back and forth between the province/feds and lots of headaches to share; taxation, age restrictions, limitations on possession, whether or not personal cultivation is going to be allowed, interprovincial transfer of MJ, restrictions on sales
So, things are finally starting to happen quicklier
Tom
