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Law United Kingdom

These people are who the media will focus on to give us mj users a bad name..


Im ashamed that these are the kind of people representing cannabis...
 
These people are who the media will focus on to give us mj users a bad name..


Im ashamed that these are the kind of people representing cannabis...
I know what you're saying and how the general (older) public may perceive this, but in a way you're also giving articles like this credence by even acknowledging the "weed" part... shit like this can and does happen at ANY event with a predominantly younger crowd... I think most people can see thru the slant, or I at least want to believe that anyway...
 
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Now they need the extra income... and votes... they gonna promise to world to stay in power caus they know they out in 2 years..
Im not buying it..
 

Could the U.K. Eliminate Novel Food Regulations for Cannabis?


A Parliamentary group has proposed what so far has been the unthinkable in Europe—removing cannabis from the ongoing regulatory hell of “Novel Foods” approvals—as more delay looms for the industry.

In what would be a major boon to the regulated cannabis industry in the U.K., a Parliamentary group has now suggested that products containing cannabidiol should no longer be subjected to Novel Food regulations. Firms who wish to manufacture CBD-containing food products to date across Europe have all had to submit such applications to prove that cannabidiol is not hazardous to human health.

In both the U.K. and the E.U., this has been rocky territory.

On the British side, in March, the Food Safety Authority (FSA) gave 3,536 products preliminary approval before complaints caused the agency to expand that list to 6,000 with more to be added. Critics have said that the system is complex, costly, anti-competitive, and has no benefit for consumers.

Those wishing to amend that path to market also argue that submitting every CBD product to this process is like using an elephant gun to shoot a mouse. Here is why. Novel Food applications are usually required only of large corporations with international reach. There is almost no chance that smaller firms would have the wherewithal to perform such processes.

The British group has also suggested that the manufacturers of such products should be required to submit COAs—or certificates of analysis—to prove that they are not hazardous to human health.

This move would drastically speed up the development of this part of the industry, with implications for THC as well. COA analysis is also the standard used routinely in the backend of sourcing for the industry. People looking for bulk cannabis flower, distillate, or isolate share COAs before purchase agreements are signed—on both the medical and non-medical side.

These recommendations, as a result, are incredibly good news indeed, especially given the unbelievably bureaucratic and frustrating lack of progress so far on both sides of the Brexit divide.

In the U.K. at least, politicians appear to be listening.

The news is not so good on the E.U. side of the discussion. The fact that the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) broke the news on Tuesday that they were delaying 19 pending applications is probably not coincidental. Even if it is, their decision puts the entire discussion about the process firmly in the spotlight within the E.U. too.

What Is Novel Food and Why Does This Matter to The E.U. Cannabis Industry?​

For those outside of Europe, the idea of “Novel Foods” has never blighted the discussion about the acceptance of any cannabinoid. In fact, foreigners do not know what the fuss is about. This is also why edibles are now about half of the total U.S. market. They simply are not subjected to this analysis.

Those in Europe have had to face a bizarre series of regulatory hurdles—beyond the “normal” issues of legalization and certification—because CBD-containing products have been subjected to a regulation adopted at the beginning of the European Union. Novel Food regulation was implemented in 1997. The idea was to prevent food that is “foreign” and potentially hazardous to human health from entering distribution within the block. Approvals are an exceedingly long, arduous, and expensive process. On the U.K. side, after Brexit, the same structural regulatory process was also applied; it was just moved under the purview of a domestic agency, not a European one.

On one level of course this regulation (sans cannabis) makes a world of sense. In fact, similar regulation exists in the United States and Canada (as it does in most countries). Cannabis products, however, have not been subjected to this kind of scrutiny in either country because of the trajectory of cannabis reform. In Canada, the edibles business did not lead the discussion. In the United States, there has been no federal regulatory environment that applied to anything in the industry because so far, legalization has only existed on a state level.

In Europe that conversation has been very different.

This is unbelievably frustrating considering that hemp, much less extracted CBD, is not “novel”. It was widely consumed in the region long before there was an E.U.

Regulators, however, don’t share that perspective. Yet.

More Delays in Europe for Pending Applications​

The new stance from the British Parliament is even more refreshing given current events on the ground.

On the E.U. side, as more delays were announced this week, according to Professor Dominique Turck, the chair of the Novel Foods and Food Allergens panel for the EFSA. “We have identified several hazards related to CBD intake and determined that the many data gaps on these health effects need filling before these evaluations can go ahead. It is important to stress at this point that we have not concluded that CBD is unsafe as food.”

The specific reason for the newest approval delay on the E.U. side is that the committee claims that there is insufficient data on the effect of CBD on the liver, gastrointestinal tract, endocrine, nervous system, and people’s psychological well-being.

As a small sop to companies with pending applications, Ana Alfonso, Head of Nutrition and Food Innovation at the agency said, “Stopping the clock on a novel food assessment is not unusual when information is missing. It’s the responsibility of applicants to fill data gaps. We are engaging with them to explain how the additional information can be provided to help address the uncertainties.”

The agency will hold an online session on June 28 which is open to applicants and other interested parties to discuss how applicants might provide information the agency claims is incomplete.
 
"saying on Monday that the government would be increasing enforcement against drugs, which involves a “strengthened” police force and ban on nitrous oxide."​

Nitrous oxide? Really? And we are supposed to take these people seriously?

With regard to cannabis, I have long been shocked that a country like England...that seems to have gone full woke recently...has retained their stringent opposition to MJ legalization.


Scotland Calls On UK To End ‘Failed’ Drug War With Decriminalization And Harm Reduction Approach


The Scottish government says that the war on drugs has “failed” and it’s time to decriminalize currently illicit substances, while promoting harm reduction services like overdose prevention centers.

At a press conference on Friday, Scotland Drugs and Alcohol Policy Minister Elena Whitham called on the government of the U.K., of which the country is a part, to take a public health approach to addiction and abandon the criminalization model. Representatives of the U.K. prime minister—and even the country’s progressive party—have already dismissed the request, however.

Scotland’s position on the issue is partly informed by a policy paper that was released on Friday, outlining the country’s position on decriminalization and related matters.

In addition to ending the prohibition on personal possession of controlled substances, Scotland is calling for the legalization of safe drug consumption facilities, increased access to the overdose reversal medication naloxone and authority to expand drug checking services to mitigate the risk of contamination in the illicit market.

“These are ambitious and radical proposals, grounded in evidence, that will help save lives,” Whitham said. “We want to create a society where problematic drug use is treated as a health, not a criminal matter, reducing stigma and discrimination and enabling the person to recover and contribute positively to society.”

“While we know these proposals will spark debate, they are in line with our public health approach and would further our national mission to improve and save lives,” the minister said. “We are working hard within the powers we have to reduce drug deaths, and while there is more we need to do, our approach is simply at odds with the Westminster legislation we must operate within.”

Friday’s report and announcement comes nearly four years since the country’s ruling party approved a resolution backing drug decriminalization in Scotland.

“Scotland needs a caring, compassionate and human rights informed drugs policy, with public health and the reduction of harm as its underlying principles, and we are ready to work with the U.K. Government to put into practice this progressive policy,” Whitham said.

Scottish First Minister Humza Yousaf said that U.K. officials “could make changes themselves or devolve the appropriate powers to the Scottish Government, allowing us to make the necessary changes at a time when drug deaths continue to be far too high.”

“We’re willing to work with them to enable us to take a bold approach,” he said.

But the U.K. government in Westminster has been quick to dismiss the drug policy reform. Asked whether it would grant Scotland’s request for an overhaul of drug laws, a spokesperson for the prime minister told STV News that the answer is “no.”

The representative said that while they haven’t seen Scotland’s report on decriminalization, “I’m confident enough to say that there are no plans to alter our tough stance on drugs.”

That’s not especially surprising, as U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has made clear that he aligns with the criminalization model on drugs, saying on Monday that the government would be increasing enforcement against drugs, which involves a “strengthened” police force and ban on nitrous oxide.

A top official with the Labour Party, Rachel Reeves, also said that Scotland’s proposal is unlikely to advance.

“I don’t think this sounds like a good policy,” she said. “I find it quite stunning that this would be a priority for the Scottish Government ” amidst unrelated government controversies.

The report from Scotland’s Drugs and Alcohol Policy Ministry calls for a “change to the legal framework within which Scotland responds to its drug deaths crisis, to enable us to appropriately tailor policy decisions to our unique challenges.” That change could be enacted through legislation or a broader constitutional reform to grant Scotland full independence over its laws, it says.

“The overarching ambition of the Scottish Government National Mission is to reduce deaths and improve lives,” it says. “Our objective is that no person finds themselves dependent on substances, but that if they do, they should be supported and not criminalised for that health condition.”

“These objectives will continue to drive our drugs policy regardless of the legal framework in which we operate and we will work tirelessly to reduce drugs harms within the powers devolved to Scotland,” it continues. “There is much more we can and will do to reduce deaths and improve lives within those powers.”
 
And in honor of Paul Reubens recent passing:

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Police Commander behind Anti-Drugs strategy admits daily Cannabis use


Mr Bennett wrote the force’s drugs strategy for 2017-21 as a commander for territorial policing.​


A senior police officer who wrote an anti-drugs strategy for the Metropolitan Police allegedly took LSD and magic mushrooms while off duty and smoked cannabis daily, a tribunal has heard.

Commander Julian Bennett, who has served in the force since 1976, is alleged to have smoked cannabis before breakfast and had regular parties at his flat in 2019.

He is also accused of failing to provide a urine sample for testing and lying about why he had not done so.

Mark Ley-Morgan KC, representing the Metropolitan Police, told the tribunal in Southwark, south London: “In about mid-October 2019 Sheila Gomes moved into the officer’s flat, staying until about Christmas 2019.

“Between November 27 and 10 December 2019, she sent [her friend] Mario a WhatsApp message in which she referred to Commander Bennett … smoking cannabis at the flat.

“Shortly before 10am on 7 December 2019, she used her mobile phone to take photographs of a bag of cannabis, cigarette paper, tobacco and lighters lying on a glass table in the flat living room.

“She moved out just before Christmas that year.

“On 17 July 2020, she telephoned the Metropolitan Police to record that Commander Bennett had been smoking cannabis before work.”

Ms Gomes told the hearing under questioning from Mr Ley-Morgan: “It would start early in the morning, before breakfast and before he would leave and go to work.

“Sometimes when he was arriving at home it was there. I never saw him eat before going to work.”

She said she believed he was a lawyer rather than a senior police officer until after she stopped living with him.

Ms Gomes added that she had never seen him in uniform.

The nurse went on: “I didn’t like it at all. Why did I have to live in a place where it was just cannabis in the air, I was just trying to breathe oxygen.

“He [the officer] was the one who was using the cannabis, I will say a few times during the day he would bring it in.

“If he would go to work [he would do it] at least before going to work and arriving at home.”

Mr Ley-Morgan said a drugs test was authorised on 20 July 2020, and a day later, in the presence of an assistant commissioner, Mr Bennett was asked to provide a sample.

It was “made clear” the order to give a sample was a lawful order but Mr Bennett refused and said he would resign, the tribunal heard.

He told officers he had been taking CBD (cannabidiol) to treat facial palsy and was worried the sample would come up positive for an innocent reason, the tribunal heard.

The hearing was told the allegations about magic mushrooms and LSD are “hearsay” that Ms Gomes was told by a housemate of hers and the officers.

Mr Ley-Morgan said Mr Bennett’s explanation for not providing a sample was “nonsensical” as it would have come up with a much lower reading if it was not being used recreationally.

Mr Bennett wrote the force’s drugs strategy for 2017-21 as a commander for territorial policing.

The document, called Dealing With The Impact Of Drugs On Communities, set up plans to raise “awareness of the impact of drug misuse”.

Freedom of information requests showed Mr Bennett presided over 74 police misconduct hearings involving 90 officers between June 2010 and February 2012.

Out of the hearings involving Mr Bennett, 56 officers were dismissed – more than three-quarters.

He chaired 69 hearings during that time and two officers were dismissed for drugs misuse, the figures showed.

Mr Bennett is accused of breaching the force’s professional standards for discreditable conduct three times, honesty and integrity twice and orders and instructions once.

His actions are alleged to have amounted to gross misconduct.

He denies the allegations and has been suspended on full pay since July 2021.

The tribunal continues.
 

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