91原创

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Editorial: Pot picture still fuzzy

Marijuana legalization has a real date. Those who had begun to suspect that the federal government was blowing smoke can now look forward to Oct. 17.

Marijuana legalization has a real date. Those who had begun to suspect that the federal government was blowing smoke can now look forward to Oct. 17.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced the official date this week, along with a few more details of the slowly evolving new regime.

It鈥檚 safe to say consumers and retailers will be champing at the bit. Whether governments will be ready by the deadline is still an open question.

Legalizing marijuana, as we have discovered over the past months, is far more complicated than writing a quick bill to take possession out of the Criminal Code. Among the biggest problems is how to deal with marijuana-impaired driving. The bill for that passed this week, but it ventures into unknown territory and will almost certainly be challenged by defence lawyers.

Unlike with alcohol, there isn鈥檛 an easy test for cannabis impairment, even though smoking up clearly interferes with one鈥檚 ability behind the wheel. Figuring out that part of the puzzle has to be completed before the new law goes into effect.

In Victoria, retailers who have already opened, often in defiance of city bylaws, are getting ready to apply for their provincial licences. If they are in business now, it鈥檚 likely they will be approved by the deadline. Those starting from nothing probably won鈥檛 be ready.

On the consumer side, it turns out that those who indulged and got caught when pot was still illegal will keep their criminal records. That comes as an unpleasant surprise to many who thought that all would be forgiven and forgotten.

While the date gives everyone some focus, governments at every level have a lot more work to do.