The Controlled Drugs and Substances Act is now law in Canada
WELCOME TO THE DRUG WARBy Dana Larsen
Photomanipulation by David Cheong
Welcome to the Drug War A Decade of Deception:
The Controlled Drugs and Substances Act was first drafted in 1986, and was introduced to Parliament as Bill C-85, the Psychoactive Substances Control Act, by the Conservative government of Kim Campbell. It died when the government called for an election, but was reintroduced by the Liberal government as Bill C-7, the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, in early 1994.
A Parliamentary Committee examined the bill and heard testimony on it in late 1994. Despite the fact that every legal, health, and drug policy group that came before it was strongly opposed to the bill, the Committee recommended no substantial changes be made, and the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act was passed by Parliament amid the furor over the Quebec Referendum in October of 1995. As a result of a break in Parliament it was renamed Bill C-8 and passed again in March of 1996.
The bill was then sent to the Senate, where it was analyzed by the Senate Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs. The Committee heard extensive testimony on the bill, almost all of it critical of the hard-line prohibitionist ideology inherent within it. Even though many of the Senators on the Committee spoke openly of their support for decriminalization and harm reduction drug policies, their committee ultimately recommended that no substantial changes be made to the bill, and it was passed essentially unchanged.
Comparing the Committees
This whole procedure was an astounding display of apathy and political expediency. Witnesses who testified before the Parliamentary Committee were prevented from discussing the failures of prohibition by Committee Chair Paul Szabo (MP Missassaugua South), who explained that the bill was merely "housekeeping," and therefore comments on the nature and purpose of Canada's drug policy were not welcome.
Although the Senate Committee was more responsive to discussing the benefits of harm reduction, they eventually made the exact same recommendation as Parliament: that there be a drug policy review only after the Bill was passed. The only difference was that the Senate Committee wanted to participate in the review along with the Parliamentary Committee.
This ultimately sets the stage for a battle between the prohibitionist Parliament and the somewhat more open minded Senators. Even though Canadians are now burdened with the brutal prohibitionism of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, this impending drug policy review is our last and best hope for an end to the prohibition of marijuana in
Canada. The Senate Recommends a Joint Review
In addition, the Joint Committee should undertake intensive public
consultations to determine the needs of different jurisdictions across Canada, including
large urban centres where the societal problems associated with the illicit drug
trade are more visible. The goal should be to devise a made-in-Canada drug
strategy where all levels of government work effectively together to reduce the harm
associated with the use of illicit and legal drugs.
To receive the full text of the Committee's report on Bill C-8, including
the technical amendments it proposed to the Bill, please call the Senate at
1-800-267-7362, email sencom@magi.com, or web ww.magi.com/~sencom/rp-c8-e.htm
Groups that support or oppose the bill
MPs for Decriminalization
A Decade of Deception
The Creation of the Controlled Drugs & Substances
Act