Thursday, June 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Federal Legislation For Cannabis-Possession Pardon Not Enough, Critics Say

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Mar, 2019 02:01 AM
  • Federal Legislation For Cannabis-Possession Pardon Not Enough, Critics Say

OTTAWA — Long-awaited legislation that makes getting a pardon for simple possession of cannabis cheaper and quicker made it to the House of Commons Friday, but critics say it won't be enough to right decades of problems caused by cannabis criminalization.


Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said his new bill would waive the $631 application fee and remove the usual five-year waiting period after a conviction before an application will be accepted.


A successful application seals a criminal record away, as long as the person convicted isn't charged with any other criminal offences.


Goodale said that this new bill is "undertaking a fundamental transformation from a prohibition system that has had consequences in Canada for more than a century," and will allow people who've been convicted of simple possession to "participate in a wholesome way in their communities."


"That's nice and generous but it doesn't go far enough, as far as I'm concerned," said Akwasi Owusu-Bempah, a University of Toronto sociologist who specializes in crime, policing and race. "Pardons are not enough to try to repair the harms."


Statistics linking criminal charges and race aren't routinely gathered in Canada, but separate reports by the Toronto Star in 2017 and Vice News in 2018 found that in several cities where figures were available, black and Indigenous Canadians were much more likely than white people to be charged with cannabis possession it was legalized last year. Separate data on drug use indicates that rates of cannabis use differ little among those groups.


Owusu-Bempah said completely expunging cannabis-possession records, which means destroying them entirely, is the only way for the government to recognize the "profound historical injustices that have stemmed from the war on drugs and cannabis prohibition in particular, especially how those have affected both marginalized and racialized populations."


Owusu-Bempah said that struggles with finding housing and employment are among the problems those who have been convicted of drug possession grapple with.


It's a view that's shared by Toronto lawyer Annamaria Enenajor, who has made expunging cannabis-possession records a cause.


"I think this government has an obligation to write the historical wrongs of decades of cannabis prohibition, particularly because the laws were unequally enforced and were primarily against vulnerable and marginalized communities including Indigenous communities and communities of colour," said Enenajor.


Enenajor said that while a pardon, or record suspension, does remove the charge from the National Repository of Criminal Records, a pardoned offence can still be reinstated by the national parole board if the board deems an individual is "no longer of good conduct."


She said a pardon regime doesn't consider the "sheer amount of people that have been impacted by these offences" or the resources that have been used in prosecuting them over the years. She said the proposed system will continue to take up money and time as applications are processed one by one, something that could be avoided with an automatic mass expungement.


Goodale said expunging criminal records is only an option when a law “violates human rights and should never had existed in the first place." He offered the criminalization of homosexuality as an example.


"With respect to cannabis, the law itself was completely valid and constitutional but some people, especially vulnerable and marginalized communities, were impacted disproportionately and unfairly," said Goodale.


Another reason the government offered for using pardons instead of mass expungements is that records of previous convictions will sometimes have been shared outside Canada, such as with U.S. border guards. A pardon can likewise be shared and will work to the former offender's benefit; if a record is expunged in Canada, the other jurisdiction's files won't necessarily reflect that.


Officials said in a background briefing that they don't know exactly how many people have been convicted of cannabis possession in Canada, but they expect the number of people who will benefit from the streamlined process could be "in the thousands."


Until the Cannabis Act came into effect last October, simple possession of the drug was punishable by a fine up to $1,000 and six months in jail.

MORE National ARTICLES

The Vatican 'Owes God An Apology,' Activist Says In Letter To Pope Francis

The Vatican 'Owes God An Apology,' Activist Says In Letter To Pope Francis
ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — The prominent founder of a Newfoundland organization for clergy abuse survivors has written a letter to Pope Francis, saying the Vatican "owes God an apology" for mismanagement of abuse allegations.

The Vatican 'Owes God An Apology,' Activist Says In Letter To Pope Francis

Task Force Says Base B.C. Rent Hikes On Inflation, Same As In Manitoba, Ontario

Task Force Says Base B.C. Rent Hikes On Inflation, Same As In Manitoba, Ontario
A task force examining the heated issue of annual rent increases that are permitted in British Columbia has recommended the hikes be reduced and tied only to inflation.

Task Force Says Base B.C. Rent Hikes On Inflation, Same As In Manitoba, Ontario

Germany Looking To Sell Costly, Rarely Used Drone To Canada

Germany Looking To Sell Costly, Rarely Used Drone To Canada
Germany is looking to sell a secondhand surveillance drone that has cost the country more than 700 million euros ($823 million) to Canada — without many core components it needs to fly.

Germany Looking To Sell Costly, Rarely Used Drone To Canada

Canada's Newest Senators: First Woman To Lead RCMP And Cree Metis Businessman

Canada's Newest Senators: First Woman To Lead RCMP And Cree Metis Businessman
OTTAWA — The first woman to hold the reins of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and a Cree Metis businessman are the two newest members of the Senate.

Canada's Newest Senators: First Woman To Lead RCMP And Cree Metis Businessman

PM Trudeau Arrives At United Nations, Hoping To Re-Establish Canada On World Stage

PM Trudeau Arrives At United Nations, Hoping To Re-Establish Canada On World Stage
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has arrived at the United Nations General Assembly on a mission to remind the world that there's more to Canadian foreign policy than just Donald Trump and North American free trade.

PM Trudeau Arrives At United Nations, Hoping To Re-Establish Canada On World Stage

Canada Removed Six Out Of 900 Asylum Seekers Already Facing U.S. Deportation

Canada Removed Six Out Of 900 Asylum Seekers Already Facing U.S. Deportation
Newly released figures show Canadian officials have removed only a handful of the hundreds of irregular migrants who arrived in Canada while they were already facing deportation orders from the United States.

Canada Removed Six Out Of 900 Asylum Seekers Already Facing U.S. Deportation