Trudeau says pot will be legal as of Oct. 17, 2018

Jody Wilson-Raybould says progressive policy will replace failed model that made criminals rich.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced today that Canadians will be able to consume marijuana recreationally without criminal penalties starting on Oct. 17, 2018.

Trudeau revealed the date during question period in the House of Commons.

“We work in partnership with the provinces, and since we’ve passed these measures in Parliament we’ve been listening to the provinces who have been asking for more time to implement it,” Trudeau said in French.

“That’s why we’re accepting the request of the provinces and that’s why we’ll be legalizing it as of Oct, 17, 2018.”

Trudeau will hold a news conference, before the House of Commons heads into its summer recess, at 4:30 p.m. ET. CBCNews.ca will carry his remarks live. He is expected to further address the legalization timeline.

While the federal government was responsible for the bill that will ultimately legalize recreational marijuana possession, home growing and sales to adults — by dismantling key aspects of the Criminal Code that ensured prohibition for 95 years — the practical details of implementing legalization have been left largely to the provinces and territories.

As is common in the Canadian system of federalism, each province has taken a different approach — and some are more prepared than others. New Brunswick, for example, has already built its first retail storefront, while Nunavut only passed its legal framework on Tuesday.

The government has long said there would be a buffer of eight to 12 weeks between the bill’s passage and full legalization to allow provinces to get their systems up and running to sell recreational marijuana from storefronts.

The Oct. 17 date is 17 weeks away.

Trudeau said three “big” provinces, including Quebec, asked for more time to put their sales regimes in place, making a longer runway for legalization necessary.

The Senate last night passed a contentious bill to legalize pot — but Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould warned Canadians today that they won’t be allowed to legally light up until the aforementioned date.

Senators passed C-45, the federal government’s bill to legalize recreational marijuana, by a 52-29 vote with two abstentions.

“Cannabis for non-medical use is not legal yet. The law still remains the law,” Wilson-Raybould said during a news conference held on Parliament Hill before Trudeau announced the effective date when legal recreational cannabis will be available.

“The date that cannabis will become legal will be announced soon. Until then, I urge all Canadians to continue to follow the existing law until the Cannabis Act comes into force.”

Calling it a “wholesale shift” in how the country deals with marijuana, the minister said the legalization approach replaces a failed model that made organized criminals rich and put vulnerable children at risk.

Upon coming into force, adults in Canada will be legally allowed to:

  • purchase fresh or dried cannabis, cannabis oil, plants and seeds for cultivation from either a provincially or territorially regulated retailer, or — where this option is not available — directly from a federally licensed producer;
  • possess up to 30 grams of dried legal cannabis or its equivalent in public;
  • share up to 30 grams (or its equivalent) of legal cannabis and legal cannabis products with other adults;
  • cultivate up to four plants at home (four plants total per household); and
  • prepare varying types of cannabis products (e.g., edibles) at home for personal use provided that no dangerous organic solvents are used in the process.

Source: The Government of Canada


Wilson-Raybould called the legislative journey that ended with the bill’s passage last night “historic.” Canada has become only the second nation in the world — after the small South American country of Uruguay — to fully legalize the drug for recreational purposes nationwide.

Timeframe coming soon

The government initially floated July 1 as the date for retail sales to begin but the timeline was pushed back as senators debated the bill at length.

Until the bill receives royal assent — the last procedural step of the legislative process — it will be illegal to transport cannabis. So the federal government believes it will take weeks to formally establish a distribution system that will allow producers to transport their product to provincially-run stores or, depending on the province, to private retailers.

Employees will have to be hired, screened and trained on the sale of the drug, too, meaning retail operations cannot materialize overnight.

Wilson-Raybould also stressed that while a companion bill to strengthen laws around alcohol- and drug-impaired driving (C-46) has not yet passed — the Senate has gutted the bill, removing a key component that allowed for mandatory roadside screening — driving while under the influence is already a criminal offence.

When asked Wednesday if the government was considering pardons for Canadians convicted of marijuana-related offences, Wilson-Raybould said such a question was “premature.”

“I think, as has already been stated, the law remains in effect until it’s repealed and replaced through Bill [C-45] and quite frankly any discussion of those records can’t take place until that process is complete,” she said.

“We’re working hard to do the important work of repealing the existing legislation, replacing it with a comprehensive system of regulatory control … It will then be possible for the government to turn its mind to the issue of the existing records or any disparity that exists.”

The NDP has signalled it will be pushing the government for some sort of “pot amnesty” with pardons for those convicted of cannabis possession offences.

No plan to challenge provinces

The Senate had proposed 46 amendments to the Cannabis Act. The Liberal government rejected 13 of those proposed changes last week (arguably the most consequential amendments, since those the government accepted were generally technical in nature), including one provision that would have affirmed the provinces’ and territories’ right to ban home cultivation of marijuana.

Quebec, Manitoba and Nunavut want to ban home cultivation. Today, Wilson-Raybould said the bill provides a “framework” and that it’s not the federal government’s intention to challenge provincial laws.

She noted that a resident could challenge any province that moves to ban home-growing, though. In March, while appearing before a Senate committee, Wilson-Raybould said the federal government wouldn’t stop provinces from banning homegrown pot — but if a citizen decided to take the province or territory to court over the issue, the feds wouldn’t be silent.

“This is federal legislation and we fundamentally support our legislation and it would be incumbent upon us to defend it,” she told the committee.

(via cbc.ca)