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MARIJUANA LEGAL PLANS REVEALED: Bills would ease restrictions on religion and medicine use - but recreation ‘an offence’

Attorney General Ryan Pinder speaking on Thursday. Photo: Moise Amisial

Attorney General Ryan Pinder speaking on Thursday. Photo: Moise Amisial

By LETRE SWEETING

Tribune Staff Reporter

lsweeting@tribunemedia.net

THE Davis administration released a compendium of bills that would transform cannabis use in The Bahamas from a strictly illegal activity to an industry regulated for medical, recreational, religious and scientific research purposes.

Officials discussed the long-anticipated proposal during yesterday’s briefing at the Office of the Prime Minister.

People caught with less than 30 grams of the substance would face a $250 fixed penalty, which would not appear on their criminal record if paid in time.

Those found with more than five hundred grams of dried cannabis would be presumed to possess the substance intending to supply it to others and could face a fine of up to $250k or imprisonment of up to ten years, or both. Possessing cannabis with the intent to supply it to a minor could carry a stiffer penalty of up to 20 years imprisonment.

 Attorney General Ryan Pinder said: “There are offences related to the unlawful possession, possession with intent to supply, possession of unauthorised amounts of cannabis, production, unauthorised smoking of cannabis in public places and misrepresentations as to medical conditions.

 “If you are outside the scope of this piece of legislation, you are committing an offence. If you are buying cannabis for recreational purposes, you are committing an offence. If you’re selling cannabis without a licence, you are committing an offence. If you are importing cannabis into the country without a licence, you are committing an offence. Those have not changed as a result of this legislation.”

 “We are proposing that current records be expunged for possession of amounts less than 30 grams.”

 Several licences could be obtained under the proposed regime: a cultivation licence to permit the growing, harvesting and packaging of cannabis; a retail licence to sell cannabis and cannabis accessories for medical, scientific research and religious purposes; an analytical testing licence; a manufacturing licence for the manufacturing and packaging of cannabis and cannabis accessories; a research licence; a transport licence to deliver cannabis within the country; and a religious use licence.

 Cultivation, retail, transport and religious use licences would be reserved for Bahamian citizens 21 years or older or companies that are one hundred per cent beneficially owned by one or more Bahamian citizens.

 Analytical testing licences, manufacturing licences and research licences could be obtained by entities for which one or more Bahamian citizens beneficially own at least 30 per cent of the company.

 “It is also a priority that these opportunities are accessible to many Bahamians, a priority that will be evident in the award of cultivation licences and the provision of agricultural land that will be set aside for this specific purpose,” Mr Pinder said.

 Rastafarian organisations could get a religious use licence to distribute cannabis to members as a sacrament. However, the substance could only be used on the premises for which the licence or exempt event permit was issued.

 “We know there is a number of different churches and divisions within the Rastafarian religion, but it’s the organisation that has to be licensed,” Mr Pinder said. “They’re the ones under the license that have the mandate to distribute amongst their members.

 “They’ll have to provide a list of membership to the authority so the authority can keep a record of the membership of the Rastafarian organisation in order to be able to properly trace and track that. So it is a regulated framework. You can’t just say, ‘I’m a Rastafarian, I’m going to smoke’. It is done at the organisational level, with the dispensing for religious purposes at the organisational level to its membership, in prescribed uses, in prescribed forms.”

 Altogether, the compendium of proposed legislation includes 11 bills, regulations and orders.

 Legislation amending the Dangerous Drug Act and the Pharmacy Act to reclassify cannabis as a controlled substance is part of the compendium of bills.

photo

Health Minister Dr Michael Darville.

 “This draft legislation will seek to remove Indian hemp from all current medical legislation and replace it with cannabis,” said Health Minister Dr Michael Darville.

 “This will create the space for CBD products, an Indian Hemp industry and bring equitable access to cannabis medical products as an option in support in the care of medical patients. It also gives way for the amendment of the Pharmacy Act because, in the new regime, we are proposing a cannabis dispensary and a cannabis dispenser.”

 He said 18 medical conditions could be treated with cannabis, including cancer, multiple sclerosis and epilepsy. The list could change depending on medical evidence.

 Dr Darville said his ministry is sensitive to concerns about how social ills could be magnified by the increased use of cannabis in the country.

 “Our aim is to strike a balance that would allow patients in need to access cannabis while maintaining public safety and security throughout the country,” he said.

 “It is important to note that medical cannabis is not intended for children, teenagers or pregnant women. We have taken great strides to ensure that we protect these potential risks and the impacts associated with these vulnerable groups because of the possible damage to the neurological system in the early forms of brain development.

 “We know that there will be exceptions to this rule and if you search the literature, you will see where medical cannabis is sometimes given in the paediatric group for some forms of refractory epilepsy and other illnesses. But this would be done on a case-by-case basis.”

 Under the regime, a Cannabis Authority would regulate the industry, overseeing the development of policies, procedures and guidelines related to various substance uses.

 The authority would be a board-managed corporation comprising nine representatives from government, medical and pharmaceutical professions, agricultural, business, and finance sectors, academia, and the faith-based and civil society communities.

 Dr Darville said public consultations on the legislation will occur next month, though meetings with various stakeholders have already begun.

 Officials said the government had consulted people in the business, religious, healthcare, and law enforcement sectors.

 Mr Pinder said he wants to consider the public’s feedback through October before tabling the compendium of bills in Parliament. He wants the legislation debated by the end of the year.

 “There’s a lot of work that’s going to be put into setting up the authority, setting up the training, setting up the certification, setting up the digital platform,” he said. “It’s going to be for the tracing and the prescriptions and all of that has to be done before the first licence is even issued.”

Comments

AnObserver 8 months, 1 week ago

Why waste so much time and money putting together complex legal framework. If you are over 18, it should be legal to buy, consume, and produce. Done, simple.

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bobby2 8 months, 1 week ago

Why re-invent the wheel. Just copy Canada's legislation.

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TalRussell 8 months, 1 week ago

Ordinary Popoulaces'. want to see in their 'elected' politicians, ---  People they can relate to because they act in the same ways as they do. ---- Unfortunately, this presents a growing worry for the unapproachable. ---- Their perception is that those, so classified as being amongst the substantive members of the colony's ruling party's premiership, --- Are a letdown. --- Yes?

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The_Oracle 8 months, 1 week ago

Just when you think they can't get any worse......... A complete complication of a simple subject. The worrisome part is the tracking of people and users, causing individuals to run afoul of other legislation that considers Drug use.

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John 8 months, 1 week ago

Are they dangling the marijuana carrots again? This government needs to learn how to stand in its own two feet and stop being dictated to by neighbors to the north,west or elsewhere. Marijuana should be decriminalized for small amounts and that will eliminate a lot if the crime associated with it being illegal. As for medical use, why was marijuana banned when medications containing more powerful drugs like cocaine, opium and other powerful drugs are widely prescribed in this country. Rum ( alcohol ) and cigarettes and all these Chinese products and vapes are more dangerous than marijuana. And if the white church was always allowed to partake in wine in their religious ceremonies, it is pure discrimination to make it illegal for BLACK BAHAMIAN RASTAFARIANS from smoking in the name of Jah

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mandela 8 months, 1 week ago

All this time and this is what the Government came up with, garbage

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SP 8 months, 1 week ago

Jackass does as jackass is! Possession of under 30 grams should be legal, period! The prison will continue to be crowded with the poorest of the poor unable to pay $250.00 for being caught with a joint.

This is beyond stupid, however, highly expected.

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bahamianson 8 months ago

Ya ga have a lot of religious people in the Bahamas, hallelujah!

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AnObserver 8 months ago

I just realized I have both ALS, and a newfound interest in Haile Selassie.

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Bonefishpete 8 months ago

Currently, 23 states and Washington, D.C., have legalized recreational use for adults 21 years and older, while 38 states have legal medical ...

Do as you do but be ready for negative publicity when police pulls them tourists off the cruise ships for Dangerous Drugs.

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DWW 8 months ago

LOLOLOLOLz plenty people joining dat church and getting glaucoma

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TalRussell 8 months ago

... Comrades, 'tis talking poppycock, --- To suggest that the US will rush-in to smoke-out the financial proceeds, --- Once personal weed use becomes 'quasi-decriminalized.'--- Yet, local Illegal lotteries sellers' --- Must've found loopholes for ways to have pocketed windfalls in the Hundreds millions dollars from Florida State Lotteries. --- Yes?

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ScullyUFO 8 months ago

Using the Canadian model in the Bahamas would be the greatest single boost to tourism in the last 50 years. The fear that Bahamians will get high and "bang on de drum all day" is baloney. It hasn't happened anywhere recreational use is legal. But carry on. Keep on arresting your own citizens for doing something that hurts nobody.

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