Canada launches review of cannabis legalisation four years on

23 Sep 2022 • 5:45 PM MYT
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Canada launches review of cannabis legalisation four years on

OTTAWA – Canada yesterday launched a long-awaited review of its cannabis regulations, four years after becoming the first major economy to legalise its recreational use.

An expert panel led by Morris Rosenberg, a former deputy minister of justice, is to measure the impact of legalisation on youth, Indigenous peoples and others, as well as the economy and an illicit market that the new regime was meant to displace.

The panel is also to examine regulatory burdens on the industry and determine if a separate framework for medical marijuana – which has been legal since 2001 – needs to be maintained in order to provide access to patients.

The mandated review, coming one year late due to the pandemic, is expected to take 18 months.

The industry has complained about what it calls exceptionally high taxes on cannabis, a glut of stores – both licensed and unlicensed – and restrictions on advertising and marketing that have made it harder to compete with the black market.

At a news conference, Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos said preliminary data this year showed 69% of the cannabis market has moved from illicit sources to legal, regulated suppliers.

The review, he said, will help the government “strengthen the (cannabis) act so that it meets the needs of all Canadians while continuing to displace the illicit market”.

Addictions Minister Carolyn Bennett said, “We know that young people are at increased risk of experiencing harm from cannabis, such as mental health problems including dependence and disorders related to anxiety and depression.”

Public awareness campaigns, she said, have made “young people more aware of the harms of consuming cannabis”, but their level of consumption has not fallen since legalisation, as hoped. 

Rather, it has remained relatively stable, she said.

According to government data, 25% of the population, or 9.5 million Canadians, used cannabis in 2021, down slightly from the previous year.

They spent an average of CA$69 (RM233) on pot per month. – AFP, September 23, 2022

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