Government Of Canada Increases Maximum Penalties For Methamphetamine

Posted on Friday, August 12 at 08:18 by jensonj
Methamphetamine has been moved to Schedule I of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, which provides access to the highest maximum penalties. The maximum penalty for production and distribution of methamphetamine has increased from 10 years to life in prison. "It is not only a matter of law enforcement but a matter of the protection of human rights, in particular, the rights of victims. The law must therefore not only reflect the seriousness of the offense but its impact on families and communities," said Minister Cotler. "The most serious cases will be dealt with by a team of designated federal prosecutors, who will have specially developed tools to assist them in conveying to the courts the full impact of the production and distribution of this harmful substance." "Today's announcement is a key step towards addressing the health and public safety issues associated with methamphetamine use," added Minister McLellan. "Together with law enforcement efforts across the country, these changes will help curb illicit trafficking of this drug. I look forward to continued cooperation with other levels of government and our stakeholders to address this important issue." Earlier this year, Health Canada also proposed amendments to add four substances used in the production of methamphetamine to the list of controlled chemicals under the Precursor Control Regulations. The illegal possession of these "precursor chemicals," for the purposes of producing a controlled substance such as methamphetamine, would become an offence resulting in either a fine of up to $5000, up to three years imprisonment or both. Together, these actions support education and treatment programs already being undertaken across the country by various levels of government and community organizations. Canada's Drug Strategy, which was renewed in May 2003, is the Government of Canada's response to addressing the harmful use of substances. The Strategy takes a balanced approach to reducing both the demand for, and supply of, drugs and includes measures to inform Canadians, and particularly youth, about the real harms of all forms of substance abuse. In support of this, Health Canada has undertake a number of important initiatives. Health Canada works to monitor and address the diversion of chemicals that have legitimate uses, but are instead used in the illegal production of illicit synthetic drugs such as methamphetamine. Health Canada has many partners in addressing diversion, including the RCMP, the Canada Border Services Agency and Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Canada, their provincial and territorial counterparts, local law enforcement agencies, key industry stakeholders and the US Drug Enforcement Administration. Also, Health Canada contributes $14 million annually for provincial and territorial drug treatment and rehabilitation services for key target groups, particularly youth and women. To address higher rates of drug and alcohol use in First Nations and Inuit communities, Health Canada funds $70 million for the National Native Alcohol and Drug Abuse Program (NNADAP) and the National Youth Solvent Abuse Program (NYSAP). As well, Health Canada provides $9.5 million in annual funding for community projects focusing on substance abuse through the Drug Strategy Community Initiatives Fund (CIF) established under Canada's Drug Strategy. The CIF was established in April 2004, and is intended to facilitate the development of national, provincial, territorial, and community-based solutions to problematic substance use, and promote public awareness of substance use and abuse issues. http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/August2005/11/c9242.html [Proofreader's note: this article was edited for spelling and typos on August 14, 2005]

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  1. Fri Aug 12, 2005 4:30 pm
    What governments should really be concerned about is the question, why would people want to knock their brains out with any kind of a substance, be it alcohol, or drugs ?

    Obviously, because they're scared and subconsciously want to knock out realities for short periods. I grew up in an impoverished European country during the Great Depression and saw the incredible degree of alcoholism that was part of daily life, while people were starving. There were no drugs then, but plenty of booze and pubs all over, while kids fainted from hunger in our schools.

    Now, economic theories, corporate dictatorships over governments, automation, etc. have robbed people of their inborn creative potentials and made them into robots to "earn" their living in mindless occupations, many of them requiring university degrees.

    As an 18 year old former student, POW and a homeless refugee, I was watching people in the postwar DP camps and found that those with manual skills were the best adjusted and best off. They could always find ways to maker their lives better and feed their families, while those with intellectual education were lost, moaning and yammering, lazy, filthy and often traded their children's food for cigarettes. That's when I decided to learn a trade, no matter how much other education I may have to absorb.

    It was 10 years later when I was able to start learning a trade, but from then I learned several and still learn new skills. When I was in the custom furniture business in Vancouver, I had all kinds of highly educated and wealthy people telling me that they would gladly give up all their fancy positions and work in a shop, making things. Many of them were drowning their frustrations in booze even then. Now, with easily obtainable drugs, young people can commit temporary suicides to block out the hopelessness of their existence.

    In other words, if people could be educated and encouraged to develop their inborn creativities, I believe, many of these problems would disappear. But that would need a logical and sustainable economic and a totally new monetary system, which the powers would never permit to happen. It is far more profitable and dramatic to fight war on drugs and war of terrorism, than allowing people to become human beings. Ed Deak, Big Lake, BC.

  2. Fri Aug 12, 2005 9:25 pm
    Penalties have no substantial decrease in usage. You must address the root cause or we will never get anywhere. For the more profit you put into the drug, the more people, and the more dangerous types of people get into the business.

    Look to the USA - harsh penalties and still have higher usage rates. Penalties by themselves don't work.

    This is a warm and fuzzy announcement to make the soccer moms happy that government is doing something. 5 years from now the problem will still be there, we will have a larger prison population and all the crime and crap that we see today.

  3. Fri Aug 12, 2005 11:48 pm
    I agree with Ed and the other poster.<br />
    <br />
    What Ive noticed though is a stepped-up Campaign to push mind altering prescription drugs<br />
    <br />
    <br />
    <br />
    <a href="http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/1999/century/episodes/06/currents/">http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/1999/century/episodes/06/currents/</a><br />
    <br />
    Television comedian Milton Berle helped make Miltown a household word in the 1950s.<br />
    <br />
    In 1957, sales of Miltown were at $28 million. <br />
    By the middle of the 1970s, more than 60 million Valium prescriptions were written each year.<br />
    In 1978, an estimated 20 percent of all American women and 14 percent of American men were taking Valium. <br />
    'BETTER THAN WELL'<br />
    With its introduction in the 1980s, Prozac was proclaimed a wonder drug by the media, as well as by some researchers.<br />
    According to the research firm IMS America LTD, Prozac is prescribed 350,000 times each year to children under the age of 16. <br />
    NEXT BIG THING<br />
    <br />
    During its first week on the market, more than 436,000 Prozac prescriptions were reportedly filled.<br />
    The average psychiatric consultation lasts more than 40 minutes.<br />
    The average consultation for internal medicine is 10. <br />
    TIED TO TRAGEDY<br />
    <br />
    One of the students blamed for the massacre at Columbine High School had been prescribed the anti-depressant Luvox.<br />
    <br />
    <br />
    I must confess to a lifelong pursuit to use mind altering methods.<br />
    <br />
    I have been and continue to be an avid reader thus allowing my mind to be altered.<br />
    <br />
    Been a boozer! MAN Now there is a mind altering experience I won’t soon be repeating<br />
    <br />
    I’ve fallen in what I thought to be love with the same result; mind altering? You betcha!<br />
    <br />
    Enter the late 60’s and 70’s. nuff said!<br />
    <br />
    Just reading some of the posts here sure da firk “alters” my mind. Again, nuff said<br />
    <br />
    <br />
    The one thing I haven’t learned though is how to apply the mind altering tricks used by the propagandist who comprise the ‘state’<br />
    <br />
    <p>---<br>"If you would be a real seeker after truth, it is necessary that at least once in your life you doubt, as far as possible, all things." <br />
    <br />
    -Rene Descartes<br />

  4. Sat Aug 13, 2005 1:50 am
    Oh goody! Higher penalties mean crystal will be more expensive. Equals more profits. Which means those nasty red necks brewing it up in their bath tubs will be pushed out by some REAL criminals. I bet the Mafia and the Hells Angels are rubbing their hands together with glee right now. Always count on the government to do something intelligent...

  5. by RPW
    Sat Aug 13, 2005 2:52 am
    Good one, Ed! But we must never ask the "why" of things - it would be far too revealing..........

    Besides, more onerous penalties don't work in the States, so I guess that's a perfectly good reason to try them up here........

    ---
    RickW

  6. by RPW
    Sat Aug 13, 2005 4:37 pm
    So we've gone from Thomas Hobbes' "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short" existence, to one of the living dead?


    ---
    RickW

  7. Sat Aug 13, 2005 6:49 pm
    Meaningless. When does a Court in Canada ever use maximum penalty provisions for any kind of crime? This is Canada, it's always someone else's fault. These government media campaigns are boring.

  8. by RPW
    Sun Aug 14, 2005 12:20 am
    We all ready have the 2nd highest incarceration rate in the world. What's the point of being yet more onerous? Time to "revisit" many of the offenses that currently put that many people behind bars.

    ---
    RickW



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