• Congressional researchers highlight growing federal-state marijuana ‘policy gap’ in new 100-page report

    Congress and federal law enforcement could choose continued inaction, allowing states to set up regulated cannabis markets without enacting reform
    Marijuana Moment (US)
    Monday, April 25, 2022

    capitol hillThe gap between federal and state marijuana policies continues to widen and shows no signs of stopping, congressional researchers said in a new report that also lays out options for how lawmakers could address the growing schism. The Congressional Research Service (CRS) published the 101-page analysis just days after the U.S. House of Representatives approved a bill to federally legalize cannabis. It covers a wide range of policy implications caused by the ongoing prohibition of marijuana under federal law as more states move to legalize for medical and adult use. From banking challenges to trafficking trends, CRS thoroughly covered how the status quo “creates unique consequences for individuals who act in compliance with state law but violate federal law.”

  • Street dealers dealt with in Amsterdam anti-drug campaign

    Mayor Femke Halsema announced earlier this month that she wants to enforce a national law that means only residents can buy
    Dutch News (Netherlands)
    Saturday, April 23, 2022

    drug dealingAs tourists return in full force to the Amsterdam red light district, Amsterdam city council has met them with police action and a campaign warning visitors against street dealers. Over the Easter weekend, the city announced, 69 people were apprehended for breaking various drug and public order laws, and 54 were banned from the area. Meanwhile, city hosts, big screens and a social media campaign are warning visitors about the risks of bad drugs, robbery and deception by street dealers, while the city has increased camera surveillance of former ‘blind spots.’ (See also: Amsterdam mayor plans to press ahead with tourist cannabis cafe ban)

  • Starting this summer, cannabis will be available for purchase in Basel pharmacies – at prices similar to those on the black market

    For years, Swiss cities have fought to be able to conduct studies of legal cannabis dispensaries
    Neue Zürcher Zeitung (Switzerland)
    Thursday, April 21, 2022

    switzerland flag cannabis2In the evening after work, before closing time, a quick visit to the dispensary to buy one or two joints legally will soon become routine for around 400 cannabis lovers in Basel. For the first time in Switzerland, a broad-based study is being carried out in the canton of Basel-Stadt in order to investigate cannabis consumption behavior. The Federal Office of Public Health (FOPH) approved the first of several pilot studies with which various cities want to analyze the consequences of a legal sale of cannabis. Cities have been working toward these trials for years. The Basel project will initially last two and a half years, after which a balance sheet will be drawn up.

  • 420 day: Berlin pro-cannabis rally demands immediate legalization

    Hundreds of marijuana users gathered in the German capital to mark 420, the annual cannabis celebration, and demand legalization of the drug
    Deutsche Welle (Germany)
    Wednesday, April 20, 2022

    germany entkriminalisering sofortAt least 500 pro-legalization protesters gathered in front of Berlin's Brandenburg Gate on Wednesday for 420, the annual April 20 celebration marked by cannabis consumers around the world, to urge the government to move forward with its plans to decriminalize the drug. "We will introduce the controlled distribution of cannabis to adults for recreational purposes in licensed stores," the government promised. But five months on and there has been no word or timetable about when legal stores might be opened, and pro-cannabis activists are getting impatient at what they consider unnecessary foot-dragging. After all, the Green Party, now a part of the government coalition, has already presented a draft law to the Bundestag in the last few years and seen it defeated.

  • 4/20 in Belgium: High time to legalise cannabis?

    Calls for legalisation of cannabis in Belgium have intensified in recent years
    The Brussels Times (Belgium)
    Wednesday, April 20, 2022

    For those partial to the psychoactive herb cannabis, 20 April (known in the US as 4/20) is a day of celebration for the drug, with groups sometimes gathering to “light up” at the given hour on the given day. Not so in Belgium, where a drug law dating back more than a century currently outlaws the drug and shrouds the use of its legal component CBD in ambiguity. With no plans for legalisation, the country lags far behind its progressive neighbours Luxembourg and the Netherlands on cannabis-related policy. Is it time the country considers decriminalising the plant?

  • Health office approves first Swiss project to sell cannabis for recreational use

    The city of Basel is the first to be given the green light by the Swiss authorities to sell cannabis for recreational use
    Swissinfo (Switzerland)
    Tuesday, April 19, 2022

    medical cannabis docterThe Swiss Federal Office of Public Health said it had approved a request for a pilot on the regulated sale of cannabis through local pharmacies. It will be restricted to just under 400 participants over the age 18 as part of a joint project by the University of Basel, its psychiatric clinics and the cantonal health department. The trial, due to begin in September, is intended to help evaluate the effects of new regulations on the recreational use of cannabis and ultimately combat black market distribution, the office said. Several other local authorities, including Zurich, Geneva and Bern, have also applied to roll out similar trials. (See also: Switzerland to launch 1st cannabis sale pilot in summer)

  • Cannabis entrepreneurs in Amsterdam feel "ignored" by Mayor Halsema

    The proposal and possible alternatives are still being discussed with the city council
    NL Times (Netherlands)
    Tuesday, April 12, 2022

    coffeeshop2Several entrepreneurs in the Amsterdam cannabis industry said they feel ignored by Mayor Femke Halsema. They said they were surprised by Halsema’s announcement saying that she, along with the local leadership of the police and prosecution service, will stick with their plan to ban foreign tourists from coffee shops to prevent drug nuisance in the city center. The officials completely ignored a white paper with alternative proposals put forward by their industry, Amsterdam cannabis purveyors Barney's, Best Friends, and Sensi Seeds wrote in a message to the mayor. They sent a letter with alternative proposals to tackle the problem. (See also: Councillors oppose Amsterdam cannabis cafe tourist ban plan | Amsterdam putting up street signs to warn tourists against drug dealers)

  • Amsterdam to ban coffeeshops selling weed to tourists

    The mayor may be heading for a clash with the city council
    NL Times (Netherlands)
    Tuesday, April 12, 2022

    nl amsterdam weedMayor Femke Halsema plans to go through with a ban on coffeeshops selling weed to tourists in Amsterdam, she said in a letter to the city council. According to her, the enforcement of the residents-only criterion is "necessary" for the municipality to get a grip on the coffeeshop market and "inseparable" from any relaxation of the cannabis policy, such as regulated cultivation or expanded trade stocks, Het Parool reports. Over three million foreign tourists visit coffeeshops in Amsterdam every year, making the capital's cannabis market uncontrollably large and a portal to serious crime. Some tourists may resort to street dealers, but research could not estimate how many.  (See also: Amsterdam mayor plans to press ahead with tourist cannabis cafe ban)

  • Tunisians call for the legalization of cannabis

    Tunisian activists call for decriminalizing cannabis and establishing a national authority to regulate the consumption of the plant
    Albawaba (Tunisia)
    Sunday, April 10, 2022

    tunisia cannabisA group of young Tunisians is calling for the establishment of a National Cannabis Bureau, and the end of the nationwide ban on cannabis. The youth group, “Badal,” claims that the law criminalizing the consumption of weed is detrimental to the future of young Tunisians. The youth-led movement calls to eradicate “Law No. 52” that penalizes cannabis consumption, explaining that it's “cruel,” the report added. Under Law 52, smoking hashish is penalized with a one-year prison sentence for anyone charged with drug possession. And the prison sentence can reach five years in case the culprit has a criminal history. The call rekindles the controversy in Tunisia regarding the consumption of cannabis, known in slang as “zatla”.

  • New program sells regulated fentanyl to help prevent overdoses from illicit supply in Vancouver

    British Columbia is approaching its sixth year of a public-health emergency declared in response to record-shattering drug deaths from an increasingly volatile drug supply
    The Globe and Mail (Canada)
    Thursday, April 7, 2022

    A Vancouver social services organization has launched a program to sell pharmaceutical-grade fentanyl to drug users who would otherwise purchase toxic, illicit substances from street dealers, a first-in-Canada model that straddles prescription-based safer supply and regulated drug sales. Under the PHS Community Services Society program, a person who would ordinarily buy illicit opioids – particularly dangerous because of their unknown potencies and additives – can instead purchase fentanyl powder capsules from one of the program’s clinical sites for the same price: $10 for a tenth of a gram, called a point.

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