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E-122 Cannabis Petition - Royal Commission on Cannabis

Showing posts with label e-18. Show all posts
Showing posts with label e-18. Show all posts

Friday, April 22, 2016

e-18 cannabis petition: LOCAL PAPER PETITIONS

e-18 cannabis petition: LOCAL PAPER PETITIONS


Along with the online e-petition, we also have many people collecting signatures on paper petitions as well. (Click here for the paper petitions.)
These paper petitions can be submitted to your local MP, or another supportive  MP, who will then read the petition and raise the issue in Parliament.
We want to have many MPs standing to read our cannabis petition, and to give many Canadians the opportunity to sign and show support.
If you would like to collect some signatures on paper petitions, just follow these easy steps.
1) Find your Member of Parliament by clicking here.
2) Call or email your MP and see if they will agree to read the cannabis petition in Parliament if you can get the minimum 25 local signatures.
3) If your local MP agrees, then print out these two pages, get 25 or more signatures from local supporters, and hand it in to your MP. (Send us a note to info@legalizepetition.ca so we can track signatures and MPs across the country.)
4) If your local MP refuses to accept the petition, or won’t get back to you, then just print out the petition formsand collect signatures anyways, and send the completed petition forms to one of the MPs below.
You don’t need to use postage when sending mail to your MP at their House of Commons address. You can send these envelopes without stamps!
Don Davies House of Commons Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0A6
Blaine Calkins House of Commons Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0A6

IMPORTANT NOTES ABOUT PAPER PETITIONS

• There is no minimum age requirement for anyone signing a petition.
• Each petitioner must sign (not print) his or her own name directly on the petition and must not sign for anyone else.
• If a petitioner cannot sign because of illness or a disability, this must be noted on the petition and the note signed by a witness.
• At least three signatures with addresses must appear on the very first sheet with the text of the petition.
• Members of the public who wish to petition the House of Commons on a matter of public interest should first submit a draft of the petition to a Member of Parliament to see whether it is correctly worded and to determine whether the Member will agree to present it.
• The subject matter of the petition must be repeated on each subsequent page.
• Petitions must be submitted on paper of usual size (8.5 x 11”).
This information comes from the Parliament Petitions website.

e-18 Cannabis petition: ALL ABOUT THE PETITION



Many members of the cannabis community worked together to craft this official 
petition, and make sure it was as inclusive and comprehensive as possible.
(Click here to sign now.)
Green Party Leader Elizabeth May has sponsored our petition, so that we have official standing in Parliament.
The Parliament Petition has eight key points, four of which can happen right away,
and four that could take a year or so to put into place.
1. Stop arrests for possession and personal growing.  
2. End the ban on bongs.
3. Let patients grow cannabis.

4. Stop raiding dispensaries.
5. Take cannabis out of the CDSA. 6. Let farmers grow cannabis. 7. Amnesty for cannabis criminal records.
8. Let provinces & cities regulate.
The first four points, which should happen right away, are:
1. STOP ARRESTS: Repeal the prohibition on possession and personal cultivation of cannabis.
This the most important first step and could be done very quickly. We are calling
for the Liberal government to immediately stop all arrests for cannabis possession,
and for growing cannabis for personal use. There is no need to keep busting people
with a bag of cannabis, or with a few plants, when legalization is just around
the corner.
2. END THE BAN ON BONGS: Repeal Section 462.2 of the Criminal Code, which bans literature and harm reduction devices like waterpipes and vaporizers.
Unbelievably, bongs and waterpipes are still banned in Canada, and stores still get
raided by police for selling these items. (See here, here and here for example.) Books
which promote the use of cannabis are also still banned. It makes sense to repeal
these silly laws right away.
3. LET PATIENTS GROW: Permit patients or their designated grower to provide medical cannabis as recommended by a physician.
This third point is related to the recent court decision which has reaffirmed the right of patients to meet their own medical needs by growing their own cannabis as
recommended by a physician. We don’t want the government to appeal this decision,
and instead to act quickly to ensure that patients can keep growing their own
cannabis as needed.
4. STOP RAIDING DISPENSARIES: End police raids against community medical cannabis dispensaries, and enable their municipal regulation, 
as per the position of the Union of BC Municipalities.
There are hundreds of community medical cannabis dispensaries opening in cities and
towns across Canada. Generally they are operating openly without problems, but in
some areas the RCMP has been threatening them or launching raids. Many cities are licensing these dispensaries, but the federal laws are unclear.
The Union of BC Municipalities has asked the federal government to confirm the 
power of cities to license and regulate dispensaries, and we support that move
happening right away.
The next four points are things which we want the Liberals to put into 
place within one year.
5. TAKE CANNABIS OUT OF CDSA: Completely end the prohibition of cannabis, by removing it entirely from the Controlled Drugs and 
Substances Act.
To truly end cannabis prohibition, cannabis needs to be removed entirely from the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act.Laws and regulations around cannabis should
be similar to the laws around alcohol, tobacco, food products and herbal medicines.
6. LET FARMERS GROW CANNABIS: Allow farmers to harvest and sell 
the cannabinoid-rich resin from their plants, as per the recent 
resolution of the Canadian Hemp Trade Alliance.
Canadian farmers already grow large amounts of cannabis, mainly to produce seeds
for food products. These farmers also produce large amount of CBD-rich resin which
they are forced to destroy.
The Canadian Hemp Trade Alliance has asked the government for permission to 
harvest and sell this resin for medical purposes, and this would provide a large
amount of low-priced CBD for patients in need.
7. AMNESTY FOR CRIMINAL RECORDS: For those convicted for a 
cannabis offence under the CDSA, on a case-by-case basis: Grant a full pardon and amnesty for past offences, expunge criminal records and 
release all prisoners currently serving time.
Ending cannabis prohibition must also make right the mistakes of the past. When
we legalize cannabis we must not forget those who are still in jail now for cannabis,
or the many Canadians with cannabis criminal records. We want a quick and easy
process for Canadians to apply to have their cannabis criminal records expunged.
8. LET PROVINCES & CITIES REGULATE: Permit Provinces, Territories 
and First Nations to decide how they want to tax, regulate and distribute cannabis as needed.
This final point is that we don’t want to see a restrictive federal program in place for cannabis. Like alcohol and tobacco, legal cannabis falls mainly under provincial
jurisdiction. We want to see the provinces, municipalities and first nations being
responsible for regulating the sale of cannabis.
This will also open up the possibility of different systems, enabling different regions to experiment with different models as we figure out the best model for legal cannabis.