Tuesday, June 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

Mayors Press Trudeau Liberals For Help To Handle Legalized Marijuana

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2017 01:16 AM
  • Mayors Press Trudeau Liberals For Help To Handle Legalized Marijuana

OTTAWA — The mayors of Canada's biggest cities say they need a slice of the tax windfall from legal marijuana to cover what they describe as significant costs associated with enforcing a signature initiative from the federal Liberals.

 

They raised their concerns with cabinet ministers this week, pressing the case that some tax revenues from sale of the drug must filter down to cover costs associated with land-use issues, business licensing applications and enforcement once the purchase, sale and recreational use of the drug is no longer illegal.

 

The parliamentary budget officer estimated in a report last year that sales tax revenue to federal and provincial governments combined could be as low as $356 million and as high as $959 million in the first year of legalization, depending on the price put on cannabis and usage.

 

"We're not in a position to collect any (taxes)," Edmonton Mayor Don Iveson, chairman of the mayors' group, said in an interview this week.

 

"One conversation that we think is important to have is support for local governments dealing with the costs of enforcement."

 

It would be up to local police to enforce impaired driving laws, provisions about sales to minors and any necessary bylaws for dispensaries that open up in communities. Halifax Mayor Mike Savage said cities are asking the federal government for more details as early as the fall about how the law will impact them.

 

"We also need some clarity around the law, so that we can be prepared to deal with dispensaries, many of whom think that they, as soon as this (bill) passes, can just open anywhere they want," Savage said.

 

Several mayors say they feel the Trudeau Liberals are moving at breakneck speed, leaving them little time to prepare for the new regime. The Liberals hope to make marijuana legal by the summer of 2018.

 
"
 
 
The one thing that, of course, concerns me is the timing of how quickly this is occurring, especially given that I certainly have concerns about likely increased costs to policing," said Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman.

 

"Depending on how it's rolled out, depending on where the revenues are being collected and by whom could play a role in helping us address our concerns and what we expect are going to be increasing costs to policing."

 

The government's legalization bill, C-45, was being debated at second reading in the House of Commons on Friday, blocks away from where thousands of delegates were gathered for the annual meeting of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities.

 

Trudeau addressed the gathering in the morning after the official start of the annual meeting, focusing on what local leaders describe as an opioid epidemic in their communities.

 

Health officials and political leaders have been sounding the alarm about a dramatic spike in opioid deaths across Canada — the focus of a national summit in Ottawa last fall that pulled together experts from across the country.

 

In his speech, Trudeau said governments won't rest until they turn the tide of the crisis, pointing to the government's latest budget as evidence of the government's interest in addressing the problem: The budget included $110 million over five years for a national drug strategy.

 

 

"The opioid epidemic has touched the lives of countless Canadians, in one way or another," Trudeau said.

 

"We must come together to address this crisis and that's why we're working with our provincial, territorial and municipal partners to find lasting solutions."

 

Later in the day, the government announced it has approved three new supervised drug consumption sites for Toronto. In a statement, Health Minister Jane Philpott said evidence shows such sites save lives and decrease hospital admissions related to injection drug use.

MORE National ARTICLES

UBC Students In Vancouver Gain New Source For Potentially Life-Saving Drug Kits

UBC Students In Vancouver Gain New Source For Potentially Life-Saving Drug Kits
The naloxone kits are offered to patients at risk of an overdose because naloxone can quickly reverse the effects of a potentially deadly opioid overdose

UBC Students In Vancouver Gain New Source For Potentially Life-Saving Drug Kits

Highway Closed After Rock Slide In Yoho National Park Injures Contractors Working To Prevent Slides

Highway Closed After Rock Slide In Yoho National Park Injures Contractors Working To Prevent Slides
RCMP say the slide happened Monday west of Field, B.C., and that traffic has been stopped in both directions.

Highway Closed After Rock Slide In Yoho National Park Injures Contractors Working To Prevent Slides

Meeting Strengthens India-B.C. Partnerships

Meeting Strengthens India-B.C. Partnerships
Meeting topics included: the recent approval by the Canadian federal government of the Pacific North West LNG project; the successful issuance of B.C.’s Indian Rupee (INR) bond; and future opportunities to expand two-way trade and investment.

Meeting Strengthens India-B.C. Partnerships

Critics Call For More Social Housing As Vancouver Set To Dismantle Homeless Camp

Critics Call For More Social Housing As Vancouver Set To Dismantle Homeless Camp
VANCOUVER — The City of Vancouver says outreach workers are helping about two dozen people move into a shelter after the homeless camp they were staying at was deemed unsafe.

Critics Call For More Social Housing As Vancouver Set To Dismantle Homeless Camp

SPCA Investigates Following Death Of Controversial Sturgeon At Tsawwassen Mills Mall

SPCA Investigates Following Death Of Controversial Sturgeon At Tsawwassen Mills Mall
VANCOUVER — The B.C. SPCA says it has launched an investigation into the death of a sturgeon that was controversially being kept at a new mega mall in Tsawwassen, B.C.

SPCA Investigates Following Death Of Controversial Sturgeon At Tsawwassen Mills Mall

Black Bear With A Taste For Tuna Damages SUV In Southeastern B.C.

  RCMP say the victim left his sandwich in his SUV in the southeastern B.C., community.

Black Bear With A Taste For Tuna Damages SUV In Southeastern B.C.