Josh Butler
A senate committee has held a hearing in Sydney on the legalisation
of marijuana for recreational purposes, as part of a series of hearings
on personal choice and community impacts.
The Senate Economics
References Committee met at the Erskineville town hall on Friday,
hearing submissions on the "sale and use of marijuana and associated
products". More than a dozen written submissions were received by the
committee, with five individuals, the Department of Health and the
National Rural Health Alliance giving evidence in person.
Senators
Sam Dastyari and David Leyonhjelm chaired the panel, which heard ideas
from medical professionals and private citizens such as how recreational
marijuana could potentially be packaged and sold, including health
warnings at the point of sale, plain packaging, regulations around
advertising and marketing of marijuana products, and taxation. Australia
legislated the use of medical cannabis products last month.
"There needs to be an acceptance that the approach to date has failed," Dastyari said.
Professor
Wayne Hall, Director of the University of Queensland Centre for Youth
Substance Abuse Research, has written and published extensively on the
legalisation of cannabis products. He argued for a system that would
make marijuana available, but under a heavily-regulated system like
tobacco.
"We should adopt regulatory regimes more like tobacco
than alcohol. We should tax the product to deter heavy use, ban the
promotion of use, and place reasonable restrictions on availability so
it is not available to under-age people," he told the hearing.
Dr Samuel Douglas advocated for the legalisation of marijuana to allow
for frameworks of health warnings -- including how cannabis could affect
pre-existing mental health conditions -- as well as suggesting plain
packaging and the labelling of different grades of cannabis strength.
"Once
you sell things, you can have health warnings at the point of sale. I
don't think a lot of drug dealers are asking clients what their family
history of mental illness is, but under a regulated regime, you could,"
he said.
"Currently, that warning is not coming at the point of sale, but when they're arrested or turn up at hospital."
A man named Tim Nixon also spoke. Nixon operates a marijuana information website called Responsible Choice,
and appears to be a private citizen -- the Senate Economics References
Committee secretariat told The Huffington Post Australia it was unable
to give any further information on his background. He told the hearing
that legalisation of recreational marijuana would decrease the use of
alcohol and tobacco, which he said were more harmful drugs than
marijuana.
"From a harm reduction standpoint, decriminalisation of
all drugs is a massive step forward. But in the regulation of cannabis,
we have an opportunity to label the product with a full cannabinoid
profile, so consumers know what's in it and how it was produced," he
said.
"The licensing regime should make it hard to obtain a
licence and easy to lose it. From a harm reduction standpoint,
[legalisation] would take some of the market share away from the two
most harmful drugs, alcohol and tobacco. By making cannabis use more
prevalent, we would see far less of the negative health outcomes of
tobacco and alcohol use, which are fatal."
"It is not helpful to categorise alcohol, tobacco and cannabis in the same category of harm, because they patently are not."
Leyonhjelm
has previously spoken in favour of legalising marijuana, claiming
criminalisation of the drug only serves to prop up criminal enterprises.
Gabriel
Buckley, national president of the Liberal Democrats party -- of which
Leyonhjelm is a member -- said he did not see why cannabis should be
considered much differently to alcohol.
In the second part of the
hearing, representatives of the Department of Health and the National
Rural Health Alliance gave a medical perspective on the debate.
In submissions, the NRHA said cannabis was a concern issue as usage was higher in rural areas than in cities.
"Cannabis
use increases with remoteness. Compared with Major cities, cannabis use
is higher in Remote/Very Remote areas: 8 per cent compared with 11 per
cent respectively. Its use is also higher among Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander people (12.5 per cent) compared with other Australians
(8.3 per cent)," the NRHA said.
"Cannabis use in rural communities
produces a number of detrimental effects. These include harms to the
individual, such as adverse physical and psychological effects, and
harms to the community, including major financial losses."
In
response to a question from Leyonhjelm about whether smoking marijuana,
or being imprisoned for marijuana possession, was more detrimental to a
rural community, NRHA policy advisor Fiona Brooke admitted the penalty
was worse.
"It's an extremely complex area, undoubtedly being
imprisoned creates much worse long-term effects on the individual and
the community than use of marijuana may do, irrespective of whether it
has health effects. The social effects of marijuana in communities is
terrible," she said, citing imprisonment and the financial costs of
marijuana usage.
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