Own your ow legal marijuana business | Your guide to making money in the multi-billion dollar marijuana industry |
Major Studies of Drugs and Drug Policy | ||||
Canadian Senate Special Committee on Illegal Drugs | ||||
Volume 2 - Policies and Practices In Canada |
|
Chapter 12 - The National Legislative ContextControlled
Drugs and Substances Act
In accordance with the commitment
the federal government made in 1987, Minister of Health Perrin Beatty
tabled Bill C‑85, An Act
respecting psychotropic substances, on June 11, 1992. It merged
Parts III and IV of the Food and
Drugs Act as well as the Narcotic
Control Act into a single piece of legislation. Bill C‑85 never
passed report stage and died on the Order Paper in September 1993, when the
34th Parliament was dissolved. On February 2, 1994, the new
Minister of Health, Diane Marleau, retabled the legislation proposed by
the former government under a different name, the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA), which was passed by the
House of Commons on October 30, 1995. After the first session of the
35th Parliament was prorogued, the bill was reintroduced in the Senate on
March 6, 1996, and renumbered Bill C‑8. The legislation went
into effect on June 20, 1996. This was the first major reform of
Canada's drug legislation since the 1960s. Apart from the amendments made in
1988 under Bill C‑61, the Narcotic
Control Act had been amended in 1985 to abolish the writ of assistance and
the procedure for establishing proof of possession of narcotics for the purpose
of trafficking. In 1987, in R. v.
Smith, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that the minimum prison term of
seven years for importing or exporting was unconstitutional under
section 12 of the Canadian Charter
of Rights and Freedoms (cruel or unusual punishment), as a result of which
it was repealed. One of the objects of the bill was
to meet Canada's international obligations under the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs (1961), the Convention on Psychotropic Substances
(1971), and the United Nations Convention
Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (Vienna
Convention, 1988). It was further designed to introduce a legislative
framework for regulating the import, production, export, distribution and use
of scheduled substances under previous acts. The following sections describe
the main provisions of this legislation. Substances
The merger of the schedule of the Narcotic Control Act with those of the Food and Drugs Acts of 1961 and 1969,
combined with the addition of new substances such as benzodiazepines and the
precursors of this long list of substances, considerably increased the number
of drugs subject to the restrictive provisions and procedures of the CDSA. The expression "controlled
substance" means a substance included in Schedule I, II, III, IV or
V. In addition, the Act defines the term
"analogue" as any substance that, in relation to a controlled
substance, has a substantially similar chemical structure. Furthermore,
anything that contains or has on it a controlled substance and that is used or
intended or designed for use in producing or introducing the substance into the
human body will be treated in the same way as that illegal substance.
offences. A total of more than 150 drugs,
psychotropic substances and precursors now appear in the schedules of the act.
It should be noted that section 60 of the CDSA continues the provision
adopted in 1911 that the Governor in Council may, by order, amend any one of
the schedules of the act by adding or deleting one or more substances where the
Governor in Council deems the amendment to be necessary in the public interest. |