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Politics

Marijuana activist Jodie Emery seeks spot on federal task force on pot

High-profile pot activist Jodie Emery wants a seat on the federal task force on legalizing marijuana. She worries the panel will be stacked with "prohibitionists" who will push for overly restrictive regulations that would limit access to cannabis.

Long-time proponent fears harsh 'Harperesque' restrictions on cannabis

Marijuana activist Jodie Emery has written to Bill Blair, the parliamentary secretary to Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould, asking to be a member on his task force studying legalization of marijuana. (Catherine Rolfsen)

High-profile pot activist Jodie Emery wants a seat on the federal task force on legalizing marijuana.

She worries the panel willbe stacked with "prohibitionists" who will push for overly restrictive regulations that wouldlimit access to legal cannabis.

Emery has written to Bill Blair, the parliamentary secretary to Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould, outlining her credentials for the job, including years of research, advocacy and political campaigning.

Shehas campaigned for legalization in the U.S. and Canada, and has operated marijuana-related businesses in media, retail and service industries. She'salso been a media commentator and spoken at international conferences.

"The government'slanguage is all very Harperesque," Emerytold CBC News. "It's all about strictcontrol, heavily regulate, additional punishment for those who operate outside the system, heavy enforcement. All this language is worrisome because it suggests we'll just have a new form of prohibition."

Pot bill in spring 2017

Blair is heading up the task force that will review issues related to everything from distribution, labelling to public safety issues, including impaired driving.Details on the composition of thetask force have not yet been released.

Health Minister Jane Philpott announced last week that federal legislation to legalize marijuana will be tabled by spring 2017.

A federal task force will study the issue of legalizing marijuana before the Liberal government tables legislation in spring 2017. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

Providing the timeline during an address at a special session on drug policy at theUN General Assemblyin New York, Philpott stressed the goals are to keep marijuana "out of the hands of children and profits out of the hands of criminals."

"We will work with law enforcement partnersto encourage appropriate and proportionatecriminal justice measures. Weknow it isimpossible to arrest our way out of thisproblem," she said.

NDP LeaderTomMulcairis pushing for an immediate decriminalization of marijuana and for criminal records removed for Canadians convicted of simple possession.

'They're not doing anything except talk'

Emery sayscontinuing to arrest and prosecute Canadian is a huge waste of time and money.

"The government said they're going to legalize it, but basically they're not doing anything except talk," she said."Their talking points seem very focused on describing marijuana as dangerous and harmful."

In her letter to Blair, Emery said it would be "negligent" for a government to draft legislation about gay marriage, immigration, farming or health care without consulting experts in the field.

She said it would be "an honour" to represent legalization advocates and cannabis consumers who support balanced, evidence-based policy.

Her husband Marc Emery is also a well-known marijuana activist and known as "The Prince of Pot." He spent five years in a U.S. prison for mailing pot seeds to the U.S.