Simple marijuana possession charges have doubled in BC since 2005 - it's time to stop the persecution
Sensible BC graphic shows dramatic increase in charges |
"Penalties
against possession of a drug should not be more damaging to an individual than
the use of the drug itself; and where they are, they should be changed. Nowhere
is this more clear than in the laws against possession of marijuana in private for
personal use."
- US
President Jimmy Carter, Aug. 2, 1977
It
simply makes no sense that thousands of British Columbians face a criminal
record each year for simple possession of marijuana.
And
it's even crazier that the number of cannabis drug offences reported by police
in B.C. jumped from 11,952 in 2002 to 16,578 in 2011.
These
government statistics mean that even as marijuana has become increasingly
socially acceptable, more people are being arrested in B.C., charged with
cannabis possession offences and getting criminal records.
Amazingly,
this province has seen marijuana possession charges more than double between 2005 and 2011, from 1,787 charges
to 3,774.
Those
charged don't include marijuana dealers, importers, exporters or growers --
just people found with small amounts of cannabis for personal use.
It's
time to follow the example of Colorado and Washington state and
end the persecution by supporting a B.C. citizens' initiative to decriminalize
marijuana.
But the
Sensible BC campaign that starts Sept. 9 won't succeed if
British Columbians -- who polls show overwhelmingly support decriminalization
-- don't get involved and force politicians to act.
A
difficult task ahead
Sensible
BC director Dana Larsen said in a Friday interview he is optimistic about their
chances but strongly urged those who agree to volunteer as canvassers.
"The
odds are way better now than when we started," Larsen said. "We have
600 canvassers signed up in the first few weeks but we need more."
A
successful initiative requires
the signatures of 10 per cent of registered voters in each of B.C.'s 85 ridings
in 90 days -- about 312,000 in total.
"The
odds are way better now than when we started," Larsen said. "We have
600 canvassers signed up in the first few weeks but we need more."
Larsen
is counting on some of the 56,000 Facebook friends
Sensible BC has to go out canvassing and is calling B.C.'s 1.4 million
landlines twice to find supporters, as well as working a 17,000-person email
list.
But the
province's initiative process is extremely challenging. Only Fight HST's initiative
has succeeded since initiatives were introduced in 1995.
Larsen
said that big cities present the toughest obstacle.
"I
feel better about the rural areas -- we really have to grow in the densely
populated urban areas like Surrey and Vancouver," he said, because voters
must sign the petition for their own riding only or they are disqualified.
Sensible
BC has already succeeded in other ways, Larsen pointed out.
"We've
shifted the debate from the federal government to what the B.C. government can
legally do," he said, adding: "The Washington and Colorado marijuana
referenda passing are huge."
Larsen
confident of victory
And
Larsen points out those who doubt Sensible BC's proposal can work that B.C. has
effectively decriminalized a surprising list of things before, despite
federal opposition: ownership of unregistered long guns; injection drug use at
Vancouver's Insite and impaired driving.
The
provincial government simply stopped enforcing the Long Gun Registry before the
Conservative government abolished it; it won court battles against the
Conservatives when they tried to terminate the Insite safe injection; and it
toughened drinking and driving laws but moved the majority of charges to B.C.
laws outside of the Criminal Code of Canada.
Sensible
BC also notes that Elections BC has approved the initiative's proposed
legislation to decriminalize marijuana.
"Elections
BC rejected the first four drafts of our legislation," Larsen said.
"They've said it's now legal. At $50 per application, it's the cheapest
legal advice available!"
That is
partly why Larsen says B.C. can decriminalize marijuana possession by simply
ordering police not to enforce the law.
Unfortunately,
the opposite is happening right now, with marijuana possession arrests up
significantly since Stephen Harper's Conservative government took power in 2006.
And that's despite Vancouver police reducing the city's number of charges.
But
Larsen is confident of eventual victory, pointing out that polling shows that
even 57 per cent of Conservative voters support decriminalization.
Marijuana will
be decriminalized in British Columbia -- but it could happen a lot sooner if
enough citizens support the Sensible BC campaign and sign the initiative
petition.
.
4 comments:
People are always miles ahead of government. Tons of money is spent trying to stop its use and folks, It isn't working
Bill,
After reading your article, I would infer that you believe that simple possession is a harmless thing and should not be criminalized.
If it is harmless, then should selling a quarter ounce to a friend be criminalized?
And then what about selling a pound to a friend for distribution to their friends?
And so on up the scale of the drug industry...
Where then does one draw the line?
Why would this be all that important?
To satisfy 60 to 70 somethings that want to relive the 1960s and The Byrds?
Look at the people who go to the 420 smoke outs at the Art Gallery.
Most just want to smoke it because there's the rebel against society aspect to it.
or try to make a million loonies selling seeds to Americans.
Decrimializing simple possession using the Holland model is good, but to balance off legally pound the crap out of the dealers who sell for cocaine and hard drugs.
That's where the problem is folks, the dealers who grow to swap for cocaine that isn't going to stop.
It's not supporters like DPL here who wants to smoke out in front of the Legislature.
Alcohol destroys more lives and families than pot will ever. Tobacco kills thousands each year and it's also legal. What's the dif?
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