Marijuana legalization: What Canada can learn from the Colorado experience

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
When you ask Colorado's first-ever director of marijuana co-ordination what's changed in the two years since the state legalized pot, he'll tell you that things look "roughly the same."

In other words, the streets are not filled with the scent of reefer and no government officials are swimming through mountains of money like Scrooge McDuck.

In 2015, Andrew Freedman, who is often referred to as the state's marijuana czar, said taxes on medical and recreational marijuana added about $130-million to Colorado's $27-billion budget.

"People think we're going to be able to construct a whole bunch of new schools. And we're like 'Well, no, we're going to put roofs on ten schools,'" Freedman said in an interview Friday as part of the Calgary Eyeopener's week-long series looking at the potential implications of legalizing marijuana in Canada next year.

- SERIES PART 1 | Change already in the air around marijuana use in Calgary

- SERIES PART 2 | Calgary marijuana accessory store sees possibilities in pot legalization

- SERIES PART 3 | Inability to test marijuana high could pose risk to oilpatch workers, says expert

- SERIES PART 4 | How the legalization of pot could lead to a real estate boom

"I think people wish that sin taxes could do a lot more than they actually can do. They just can't compare to income tax," Freedman said.

What has changed

While marijuana legalization has not caused the sky to fall in Colorado, Freedman said there are some "concerning statistics" that have emerged.

"There have been an increase in hospitalizations and emergency room visits, so we're digging deeper into why that would be. In addition, roadside deaths and roadway deaths — drivers are testing more positive for marijuana at a greater rate than before."

- MORE NEWS | WW II veteran who went to 'heck and back' to be reunited with lost medals

- MORE NEWS | Why Canadians will probably never stop ordering 500-calorie Starbucks lattes

Freedman said a "heartening statistic" is the 8,000 fewer criminal filings for marijuana since 2014 — a direct result of the fact that it is no longer illegal for an adult to walk around Denver with one ounce of weed in his or her pocket.

"It's about criminal justice reform," he said.

"Those are the discussion that should be going on in your country and community for why this would or wouldn't be a good idea."
 

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
how are these drivers being tested....pffft....
Saliva test which only detects the presence of THC and has nothing to do with impairment. My guess is the number of drivers with THC in their system is about the same as it was before legalization. Interesting nobody has attempted to develop a roadside test for opiates.
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
Saliva test which only detects the presence of THC and has nothing to do with impairment. My guess is the number of drivers with THC in their system is about the same as it was before legalization. Interesting nobody has attempted to develop a roadside test for opiates.
But then they'd have to arrest themselves.
 
Top