Thursday, July 2, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. joins small group with drug decriminalization

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Jun, 2022 09:42 AM
  • B.C. joins small group with drug decriminalization

VANCOUVER - British Columbia will soon join a handful of jurisdictions around the world where drug users aren't criminalized for possessing small amounts of some illicit drugs for personal use.

Charges will not be laid in B.C. against anyone 18 or older possessing up to 2.5 grams of opioids, cocaine, methamphetamine or MDMA, also known as ecstasy, for three years, starting Jan. 31, 2023.

Uruguay, Portugal, Mexico, Argentina, Colombia, Ecuador and the state of Oregon all have introduced some form of decriminalization in an effort to curb overdose deaths.

Portugal was the first European country to decriminalize all drugs in 2001 and users were provided therapy rather than prison sentences, but B.C.'s addictions minister, Sheila Malcolmson, says decriminalization will not mean forced treatment.

Malcolmson also says substances will not be confiscated, unlike in Oregon, where possession attracts a US$100 fine.

Carolyn Bennett, the federal minister of mental health and addictions, says a decriminalization proposal from Toronto Public Health is currently up for consideration, and the government plans to work with the city in the same way it did with B.C. to "get it to a place that would be successful."

She says there has also been some interest from Montreal, Edmonton and Saskatoon, but they have not submitted proposals seeking decriminalization.

MORE National ARTICLES

Alberta, Ottawa ink $10-a-day child-care deal

Alberta, Ottawa ink $10-a-day child-care deal
Alberta has signed on to Ottawa’s $10-a-day child-care program, but not before Premier Jason Kenney dismissed the federal contribution as recycled provincial money and accused Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of playing favourites.

Alberta, Ottawa ink $10-a-day child-care deal

Dozens rescued from B.C. highway mudslides

Dozens rescued from B.C. highway mudslides
Jashanpreet Singh and his wife, Harleen Kaur, were also caught between the two slides Sunday and came upon a vehicle that had been partially crushed by a slide. A nine-year-old boy had been injured and had blood coming out of his nose and ears, Kaur said. Firefighters who were first to the scene on Sunday were able to take the boy to care, she said. 

Dozens rescued from B.C. highway mudslides

Tory senator pushes for O'Toole leadership review

Tory senator pushes for O'Toole leadership review
A Conservative senator has begun a petition pushing for a review of Erin O'Toole's leadership of the party within six months — the latest rumbling of discontent over losing the recent federal election.

Tory senator pushes for O'Toole leadership review

Premier faces call for early leadership review

Premier faces call for early leadership review
Representatives of 22 UCP constituencies have sent a letter to the party's executive saying they have met the required threshold required for a vote on Kenney’s performance at a special meeting before March 1.

Premier faces call for early leadership review

People trapped on highway to be rescued by air

People trapped on highway to be rescued by air
Twelve people had been rescued from Highway 7 near Agassiz by the local fire department on Sunday evening before the Vancouver Heavy Urban Search and Rescue Team was called in on Monday.

People trapped on highway to be rescued by air

Group calls for vote on Surrey, B.C., police force

Group calls for vote on Surrey, B.C., police force
Darlene Bennett launched the campaign with the group Surrey Police Vote over concerns about rising costs associated with starting a new municipal police force, which was a key pledge in Mayor Doug McCallum's election campaign in 2018.

Group calls for vote on Surrey, B.C., police force