Zaid, Valleriani and Thurley: Impaired driving bill overly targets medical cannabis users

gb123

Well-Known Member
recently, the House of Commons Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights has focused its attention on Bill C-46, which will tighten impaired driving laws, particularly cannabis impaired driving.

While there is no disagreement that laws targeting impaired driving should be strongly enforced, and the government has taken a positive step forward in contemplating impaired driving law reforms, the proposed testing and enforcement mechanisms in Bill C-46 raise significant questions and concerns around civil liberties and human rights.

The law as proposed would criminalize Canadians who use medical cannabis responsibly – even when they are not actually impaired.

While no one should drive impaired, the proposed changes will serve to disproportionately criminalize the estimated 150,000 individuals who use cannabis legally and regularly for medical reasons, with physician support, across Canada.

That’s why it’s so disappointing that patients and patient advocacy groups, including Canadians for Fair Access to Medical Marijuana, were denied an invitation to express their views at these sessions.

The proposed changes to driving impairment laws will introduce per se limits for cannabis, similar to how we identify those driving under the influence of alcohol. While this may make sense on the surface, the science simply isn’t there when it comes to correlating cannabis use and impairment.

Unlike blood alcohol concentration, which is scientifically linked to levels of impairment, matching impairment to levels of THC – the main psychoactive component in cannabis – is still widely debated.

Determining actual impairment of cognitive, psychomotor and other functions necessary to safely drive is not as simple as measuring the presence of THC in blood. Even more importantly, the effects of THC are different from person-to-person, and THC can remain detectable within a regular user’s blood for days, potentially weeks, after it was last consumed.

It should also be said that authorized medical users are expected to follow advice from health-care providers, including safe-use guidelines, such as waiting at least four-to-six hours after consumption before driving to help eliminate risk of impairment.

However, the government’s proposal, which would set a per se cut-off of 2ng/ml THC at the lower end, would mean patients would have to stop using their medication three-to-seven days (or more) before driving, which has nothing to do with impairment.

For many patients, using medical cannabis isn’t about its psychoactive effects, but rather managing their symptoms with minimal impairment. This presents novel challenges that deserve consideration and a voice when it comes to the practicalities of “impaired” driving laws.

Given this context, do we simply allow the undisputed potential criminalization of responsible medical users without allowing them to participate in this important debate?

Allowing for a diverse and inclusive conversation can assist policy-makers in acknowledging the various experiences and realities of Canadians prescribed medical cannabis.

Without it, overly restrictive and blanket regulation that does not duly consider the most vulnerable, key affected populations will simply lead to ineffective policy and ongoing court challenges.

While the issue is undeniably complex, and medical cannabis authorization is not a licence to drive impaired, at the very least, the justice committee should be allowing for testimony from patients, physicians and scientists on how these laws may affect medical users.

If they use cannabis regularly to manage their symptoms, they will consistently test above the per se limits. This means the proposed bill would disproportionately criminalize a vulnerable and already stigmatized population under a legal system.

After all, the point of regulating cannabis is not to increase harms through laws which may overly criminalize legal medical users, but rather should be focused on undoing many of the harms which, from a medical viewpoint, have contributed to additional barriers in research, accessing medical cannabis and the ongoing stigmatization of medical use.
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
Dykie winn was here last week tapping the keg at KW's annual drunk fest they pretend is Octoberfest. They spout off that it's all about family , good food and celebration.
Ya right....I've lived here more than 50 years and it about beer...beer...beer. The drunken hypocrites need to be jailed imo.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
These boys are fanatics I'm afraid, was dealing with them earlier and they got so embarrassed they shit and ran. Create a safe space for me, I glad cause I don't wanna clutter up my threads with this trash. Had a lot of fun and some teachable moments, if ya were following along you know of they're shame and just how unstable both are, unfortunately.

Put the last part of the spanking on the Canada4 thread, in case anybody missed it.
https://www.rollitup.org/t/canada-grows-to-the-4-plant-limit.948839/page-14
 

WHATFG

Well-Known Member
It should also be said that authorized medical users are expected to follow advice from health-care providers, including safe-use guidelines, such as waiting at least four-to-six h
who made these guidelines up,and what are they based on?

For many patients, using medical cannabis isn’t about its psychoactive effects, but rather managing their symptoms with minimal impairment. This presents novel challenges that deserve consideration and a voice when it comes to the practicalities of “impaired” driving laws.
with all the pharma crap thats on the market, why is it cannabis is the only drug to warrant such scrutiny?....oh right there's that little sticker that cautions you to use care when operating a motor vehicle. why isn't that sufficient for the marijuana?
 

CalyxCrusher

Well-Known Member
These boys are fanatics I'm afraid, was dealing with them earlier and they got so embarrassed they shit and ran. Create a safe space for me, I glad cause I don't wanna clutter up my threads with this trash. Had a lot of fun and some teachable moments, if ya were following along you know of they're shame and just how unstable both are, unfortunately.

Put the last part of the spanking on the Canada4 thread, in case anybody missed it.
https://www.rollitup.org/t/canada-grows-to-the-4-plant-limit.948839/page-14
HAHAHAHAHAHAHA. the only one who needs a safe space is you. Which is why you keep linking to it. We all have thick skin here. Your lack of perceived intellect achieved nothing more than cluttering our forums. Go fill your ecig douche flute with some vape juice and go cuddle your body pillow while watching your anime. Fucken snowflake pussy generation
 

GroErr

Well-Known Member
Sounds like I crashed a mean girls club and found the members.
You crashed the Canadian forum where we share or consume information that might be useful to medical patients. We're not interested in your lists and long winded responses, spamming threads with links to your useless threads, nor do we have the time to sort through your copy/paste threads. That's because many of us have lives and pop in/out here & there, the last thing we need or want is having to filter through your crap. Got it?
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
You crashed the Canadian forum where we share or consume information that might be useful to medical patients. We're not interested in your lists and long winded responses, spamming threads with links to your useless threads, nor do we have the time to sort through your copy/paste threads. That's because many of us have lives and pop in/out here & there, the last thing we need or want is having to filter through your crap. Got it?
You I respect, others not so much, sorry for the intrusion, won't happen again, though I am a perscription holder too
 
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