Another good Jenna article

leaffan

Well-Known Member
she really seems to have a handle on the situation...

http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/jenna-valleriani/medical-marijuana-in-canada_b_6334998.html


The transition from Health Canada's old medical cannabis regulations, the Medical Marihuana Access Regulations (MMAR) to the new regulations, the Marihuana for Medical Purposes Regulation (MMPR), removed the right of patients or caregivers to produce their own medicine.

Under the new program, cannabis can only legally be accessed through commercial producers, called Licensed Producers. However, a group of patients have launched a constitutional challenge, which is being heard in late February that will address ideas of affordability and patient care under the MMPR. Leading up to this case, in March 2014, patients with a valid authorization to possess and personal production license were granted an "injunction," which preserved their growing rights until the court case. This was an important decision which, in the meantime, will prevent the violation of patients' constitutional rights to life, liberty and security. Recently, this injunction was appealed, but yesterday the unanimous decision to uphold the injunction was released, and soon after, lawyer Kirk Tousaw tweeted, "both systems can and should exist."

Imagine an outcome where aspects of the MMAR, namely personal growing, are coupled with the emerging legal medical cannabis market, simultaneously. Individuals can choose to grow their own cannabis entirely, subsidized some of their supply with a Licensed Producer, or completely utilize LPs as their route of access. This could mean the solution to a few of the larger problems of the MMPR -- many centred on affordability and strain selection -- could be mediated by a fusion of both old and new federal programs.

There were problems with the MMAR, and they were often attributed to poor legislation and follow through. No inspections of home gardens ever really happened, some question the issue of diversion and others worried about public safety, but overall, the RCMP has relatively few statistics on diversion and risk to public safety actually being the case.
Susan Boyd and Connie Carter really take this point home in their book, Killer Weed, which highlights how cannabis grow operations have been targeted and demonized by media, positioned as an increasingly dangerous criminal activity. In fact, the authors analyze media reports in British Columbia, demonstrating how these moral and sensational claims have intensified the perception of grow operations as significantly dangerous and linked to criminal activity, simultaneously fuelling the Canadian cannabis war.

For example, in one case the authors analyze this depicted link between cannabis grow ops and guns in media reports, citing an unreleased RCMP funded study in 2005 which found 'firearms or other hazards' in just 6 per cent of cases. Even though "...there is no comprehensive scholarly and peer-reviewed research to support claims that legal medical marijuana sites are linked to criminal elements or pose safety hazards to children," as the authors write, personal growing rights for medical patients in Canada are certainly intertwined against a complex political, legal, economic and cultural backdrop in Canada.

Canada does offer, however, one of the first federal level medical access programs in the world, a right that was not easily won. We should certainly see our medical cannabis program (although there are many issues that need to be sorted out) as a progressive step in the right direction. Medical cannabis emerging as this new market under the MMPR also seems to be paving the way for an inevitable legalization for recreational users as well. This would mean Licensed Producers would be at the forefront of this potential new market, and if they told you that wasn't part of their long term plan, I bet they'd be fibbing.

In one way, the normalization of cannabis for medical purposes is really lending a hand to the risk/harm discourse around cannabis, more researchers are taking an interest in cannabis related studies from institutions and organizations across Canada, and doctors are slowly but surely coming around to learning about cannabis. More doctors are stepping up to the plate to organize and educate about cannabis. Let's face it: doctors want to hear about 'cannabinoid therapy' from other doctors.

In my own research, LPs have, for the most part, supported the injunction and patients rights to grow. Typically, this attitude relies on the acknowledgement that the MMPR will widen its net to a projected 400,000 patients in Canada over the next 10 years. Those who can continue to grow constitute relatively small bananas in the grand scheme of potential patients. It's really difficult and misleading to blanket the entire MMPR as "bad" and the MMAR as "good" (or whichever combination).

This ignores the complex nuances, including all those different dimensions I mentioned above, that contribute to a unique political and legal context here in Canada. Instead, gearing our efforts towards thinking about how elements of both programs can co-exist will only leave us with more choices: as a patient, you could grow your own, access a legal supply and have it delivered to your front door semi-anonymously, or you could do both.

The real gold star would be incorporating the work of dispensaries, whose unparalleled work seems to be continuously ignored by Health Canada, into this mix. In fact, I personally know so many patients who continue to access through dispensaries for numerous reasons: they like talking to humans in person, they like to see or smell their cannabis before they purchase it, they need access to consistently dosed edibles and extracts, and generally (but not always) prices are more affordable.

Many of these same people have registered with LPs and more often access through dispensaries. You can't put a price on the "social capital" dispensaries have been proven to provide patients. Its interesting that after a relative drop off in dispensaries everywhere except Vancouver, we're seeing a real resurgence of dispensaries opening in places like Toronto, Brantford, and Montreal.

I believe ideas centering on how to make this program work are more productive and will produce more long term benefits for patients and patient rights. Patients should certainly be able to grow their medicine, and this ensures patients aren't left with insufficient reasonable access, stifling their liberty and forcing many to risk criminalization over a right previously granted.

This blog previously appeared on Lift.
 
Its a fucking plant that will grow anywhere. it would only take me a short time to brew wine from grapes, beer from hops and barley to making some vodka and have a substance 1000X more dangerous than cannabis from legal plants.

The MMPR is a gong show of corporate folk and x illegal growers drooling over building stock or doing pump and dumps. Wasn't MMPR suppose to have been suitable for small businesses along with big ones before it started? At this moment it is anything.. Imagine if there were 100+ small MMPR producers that were just a provincially incorporated business ran by a few employees/family. The price of weed would drop and the quality of the product would be crazy.

Canada only has 35Mil people and even though we have a high number of people who consume cannabis 2.8 mil the MMPR will represent a tiny fraction of those people even if getting a prescription was made easier. The only reason I see any MMPR company going through all the hoops to get a license is to wait it out till legalization.

Even though I wasn't too happy about the BIG MMAR abusers I find it funny that it was not ok for MMAR licensees to make money off their plant but its ok now by MMPR companies. I must be the only one seeing the farce here.
 
because it was illegal for MMAR growers but it's legal for MMPR growers....fucked from the beginning.
I think it's because the Government doesn't get taxes from MMAR whereas MMPR, they might....until it's really recognized as a medicine & the it's a zero rated GST item..not taxable.
I attended the case where a BCCCS grower was on the hook from CRA for medicine he grew for the Compassion Club. that's where i got the phrase "zero rated"
 
I think it's because the Government doesn't get taxes from MMAR whereas MMPR, they might....until it's really recognized as a medicine & the it's a zero rated GST item..not taxable.
I attended the case where a BCCCS grower was on the hook from CRA for medicine he grew for the Compassion Club. that's where i got the phrase "zero rated"

The thing is there is very little tax revenue from MMPR companies. First GST/PST will be a minuscule amount to the billions on tax revenue HC is claiming it'll be making. These are big corporations ran by crafty loops hole abusers so they'll probably pay nothing in corporate tax. Hell most will be paying nothing in corporate tax as none of them will show profit at the end of their fiscal year, they'll probably be in the negative for years to come. Now way in hell will any of them show profit for the amount made from product vs what they spend on production costs.

There have been a few of those cases in BC. If that was me I would have been paying my taxes from the start. Once they accepted my money I'd have amo for my lawyer if I ever got busted for growing.

You know what brings in tax dollars and boosts local economies, MMAR growers spending money of supplies to grow the plants and if they are diverting they are spending that money locally. Of course none of the write ups/paper will ever mention this. Those 200+ hydro shops in Canada probably bring in more GST/PST into the system mopnthly then the MMPR companies ever will not including corporate tax at the end of the year.
 
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