(Trinidad Newsday) While senators agreed decriminalisation of marijuana is a step in the right direction, some said a joint select committee (JSC) is needed to treat with concerns in the Dangerous Drugs (Amendment) Bill 2019.
Independent and Opposition senators raised concerns citing regulatory issues, health effects and the accessibility of the drug to youths and schools as some of the more pressing issues which a JSC could settle.
“Our society would be better off with a system where the government has a hand in providing proper controls for the use of marijuana,” said Opposition Senator Taharqa Obika.
He called for regulation adding that, like alcohol, marijuana could benefit from government control and influence.
“When there is no regulation, people going all these places to get marijuana. It doesn’t tell you how potent, or otherwise, what you are consuming is. But if you regulate it properly, as they do in Jamaica, you can get your choice of marijuana.”
Independent Senator Paul Richards called on government to not get carried away with the positives of decriminalisation, saying that even in some of the exemplary areas where the narcotic is legal, there have been some negatives.
He said, in Colorado the number of fatal accidents, where one or both drivers were intoxicated with marijuana, increased by 80 per cent from 2013 to 2015, and marijuana-related road deaths increased by 66 per cent in the four-year period where it was decriminalised.
He also referred to several reports which speak about the detrimental effect of marijuana on the brains of people under the age of 25. He said those with a predisposition to psychosis could be negatively affected.