Parents could legally give 16-year-olds pot under ‘social sharing’ law

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
At least on paper, sharing a joint with a 17-year-old can bring a sentence of up to 14 years after legalization.

But an amendment passed Monday by a Senate committee, which could make its way into the final law, carves out two major exceptions in which adults can share marijuana with minors. The change will protect:

  • Someone 18 years of age or older, who gives the pot to someone less than two years younger than they are
  • A parent or guardian who gives it to someone who is at least 16, but only in their home
The change, proposed by Nova Scotia independent senator Wanda Bernard, was passed on a 7-5 party-line vote by the Senate’s social affairs committee Monday.
“Parents have a responsibility to parent their children, and they should be able to teach their teens appropriate use of cannabis without fear of criminal penalty,” Bernard told the committee. “It would be sharing of a legal substance, not an illicit substance. I would see it as being similar to sharing a glass of wine in one’s home.”

It still has to pass the full Senate and go back to the Commons, but Victoria lawyer Kirk Tousaw sees Monday’s decisions as probably the last round of meaningful tweaks to Canada’s new marijuana law.

“I don’t think the full Senate will do much or anything in the way of introducing its own amendments.”
“Close-in-age exceptions in the criminal law consequences are not uncommon,” he says.

“It only makes sense that we shouldn’t be looking at criminalizing a 19-year-old that’s sharing a joint, or small amounts of cannabis, with their 17-year-old peers.”

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The change would also allow parents to introduce their children to legal cannabis under supervision, much as some families now do with alcohol.

“This was a very sensible and appropriate amendment to make sure that we’re not criminalizing behaviour that is both normal, in the case of teens sharing amongst themselves, and socially positive, in the sense of parents being the ones to introduce their young adults and teenagers to cannabis consumption,” Tousaw said.

Three Conservative senators spoke against the amendment.

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“I think we have to assume that this is kind of opening the door to – it’s the same as kids who give someone $10 and say to someone, ‘Go buy me a pack of cigarettes,’ or ‘Buy me a bottle of wine,‘ or something,” said New Brunswick senator Carolyn Stewart Olsen.

“I’m not saying we can stop it, but I‘m not saying we should encourage it, either.”

WATCH: Colorado law enforcement officers offer tips for how Bill C-45 could curb a flourishing black market for marijuana ahead of legalization.


“This amendment legitimizes the fact that we want to legalize already for 16-year-olds to smoke marijuana, when we have compelling evidence that we shouldn’t even be allowing people under the age of 25 to do this,” said Manitoba senator Neil Plett. “We’re going down further and further and further.”

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Depending on the province, people under 18 or 19 may be ticketed for possessing cannabis under legalization, no matter who gave it to them, and the people who gave it to them might also face provincial charges, similar to a traffic ticket.
 

TheRealDman

Well-Known Member
So when you give your 16-18 year olds a beer or glass of wine at home, are we encouraging them to become alcoholics? No! We’re teaching them how to be responsible young adults around booze! Why wouldn’t you do the same thing with Cannabis? I’ve been high with both of my kids at 16, because that’s when they first started experimenting with it on their own. Both of my kids know when they’ve had enough!
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
both my kids one 17 the other 14 have not even tried it yet...their friends have The younger ones more.....but after watching dad eat it since they were kids,they just dont care about getting high,,not sure why really. They could easily take some if they wanted to
,Id know........ im just sayin..
drinking as well..
Id done both by the time I was 14...
 

cannadan

Well-Known Member
I raised 3 and not one of them partakes....but they all drink since their mom allowed it before they were of age.
hmmm maybe I should have offered....but It just did not seem right thing to do at the time....
They all had access if they really wanted to experiment with cannabis....
 

GrowRock

Well-Known Member
The wife and I shared some with our oldest when she was 16 she asked lol. We figured it was best for her to come to us for info on anything and everything. Time fly’s I can’t believe she’s moving out at the end of the summer and moving away for university.
 
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