Pubdate: Mon, 22 Feb 2010 Source: Northumberland News (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 by Metroland Printing, Publishing & Distributing, Ltd. Contact: http://www.northumberlandnews.com/opinion/submitletter Website: http://www.northumberlandnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2373 Author: Russell Barth JAIL TIME NOT A CRIME DETERRENT To the Editor: Re: 'Cobourg roundtable discussions examines justice system' (Feb. 19). The Conservatives are anything but "tough" on crime. Their crime and drug policy has three parts: 1) To pander to myopic, media-addled, punishment-fetishists who make up his voter base and who think jail is the best cure/deterrent for any behaviour; 2) to paint anyone who speaks sensibly about drugs as "soft" on crime; 3) to impose a U.S.-style, for-profit prison industry onto Canadians. There is no evidence to support the notion mandatory minimum jail sentences work (and Minister of Justice Rob Nicholson raged against them when he sat in Opposition), and since crime has been dropping for 25 years, there seems little need for them. There is also no merit to Mr. Nicholson's repeated public assertions that "this is what Canadians want," because poll after poll shows the majority of Canadians would rather see marijuana laws relaxed, not toughened. There is however, substantial evidence to show mandatory minimum jail sentences are outrageously counterproductive. In fact, all the evidence shows this. Bill C-15, which offers mandatory jail sentences for growing even one marijuana plant, would necessitate the building of no less than 12 new billion-dollar prisons, and cost taxpayers upwards of $500 million per year to maintain. Since tens of thousands of people under the age of 30 will be in jail, this will make the 'jobless' numbers appear lower. Maybe this is Stephen Harper's plan to reduce unemployment? There will certainly be jobs for guards. This policy has been wildly successful in the U.S. It has increased partisanship, filled the airwaves with balderdash, increased crime, and has made a handful of wealthy Americans even wealthier. And that is what Mr. Harper wants for Canada. Incidentally, the Netherlands, where marijuana is sold in 'coffee shops', they are laying off guards and closing jails because they don't have enough crime. Russell Barth Federally licensed medical marijuana user Nepean - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D