The Liberal government will announce legislation next month that will legalize marijuana in Canada by July 1, 2018.
CBC
News has learned that the legislation will be announced during the week
of April 10 and will broadly follow the recommendation of a federally
appointed task force that was chaired by former liberal Justice Minister
Anne McLellan.
Bill Blair, the former Toronto police chief who
has been stickhandling the marijuana file for the government, briefed
the Liberal caucus on the roll-out plan and the legislation during
caucus meetings this weekend, according to a senior government official
who spoke to CBC News on condition of anonymity.

Bill Blair, parliamentary secretary to the minister of justice, briefed the Liberal caucus on new marijuana legislation, which leaves the provinces to decide how marijuana is distributed and sold, according to a senior government official. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)
Provinces to control sales
The
federal government will be in charge of making sure the country's
marijuana supply is safe and secure and Ottawa will license producers.
But
the provinces will have the right to decide how the marijuana is
distributed and sold. Provincial governments will also have the right to
set price.
While Ottawa will set a minimum age of 18 to buy
marijuana, the provinces will have the option of setting a higher age
limit if they wish.
4 plants per household
As for Canadians who want to grow their own marijuana, they will be limited to four plants per household.
Legalizing marijuana was one of the more controversial promises Justin Trudeau made as he campaigned to become prime minister.
- Highlights from the federal marijuana task force report
- What can Canada learn from U.S., Uruguay about selling marijuana?
But in their platform the Liberals said it was necessary to
"legalize, regulate and restrict access to marijuana" in order to keep
drugs "out of the hands of children, and the profits out of the hands of
criminals."
The Liberals had promised to introduce legislation by
the Spring of 2017. Announcing the legislation the week of April 10
will allow the party to hit that deadline.
Raids raise questions
Trudeau
referred again to that rough timetable a few weeks ago when he said the
legislation would be introduced before the summer. But at the same time
he also warned that it wasn't yet open season for the legal sale of
marijuana.
"Until we have a framework to control and regulate
marijuana, the current laws apply," Trudeau said in Esquimalt, B.C. on
March 1.
That warning became more concrete a week later, when police in Toronto, Vancouver and other cities carried out raids on marijuana dispensaries and charged several people with possession and trafficking, including noted pot advocates Marc and Jodie Emery.
Trudeau's promise to legalize marijuana was seen as one of the reasons
for the Liberals' strong showing among youth voters in the 2015
election.
But at the NDP's leadership debate
in Montreal Sunday, which was focused on youth issues, several of the
candidates pointed to marijuana legislation as an example of a broken
Liberal promise.
Source:http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/liberal-legal-marijuana-pot-1.4041902

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