Ontario marijuana bill includes school bus safety law that has 'nothing to do with pot' - Action News
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Toronto

Ontario marijuana bill includes school bus safety law that has 'nothing to do with pot'

What does passing a stopped school bus with its lights flashing have to do with the Ontario government selling pot?

Liberals deny they're playing games with new legislation to control retail sale of cannabis

The bill to regulate recreational marijuana sales in Ontario also contains a provision to allow photo-ticketing of drivers who illegally pass stopped school buses. (Paul Palmeter/CBC, Joe Mahoney/Canadian Press)

What does passing a stopped school bus while its lights are flashing have in common with the Ontario government selling pot?

The two seemingly unrelated issues are packed into one piece of legislation from Premier KathleenWynne'sLiberal government.

Ontario's cannabis legislation, Bill 174, would regulateeverything about the sale of recreational marijuana in the provinceonce legalization takes effectacross Canada next July.

The bill would setthe minimum age to buy pot at 19, would create a new Crown corporation so the government can sell weed from shops and online, and it would dictate where pot can be consumed.

The same bill would also lay the groundwork to put cameras on school buses to allow automated ticketing of drivers who blow past school buses when stopped to pick up or drop off passengers.

The opposition Progressive Conservatives, who proposed a similar school bus safety law in the legislature eight months ago, say the Liberals are playing games by jamming it into the more controversial marijuana bill.

Progressive Conservative transportation critic Michael Harris. (Mike Crawley )

"What in the world does school bussafety or camera safety legislation have to do with the Cannabis Act? Nothing," said PC transportation critic Michael Harris.

The Liberals putthe two pieces of legislation together hopingthe PCs will vote no over concerns about the marijuana sales regime,Harris said. That wouldgive the Liberals a chance toportray the PCs as being opposed to safer roads.

"That's their motive here," Harris said in a news conference at Queen's Park on Wednesday,"They'll go out to every parent teacher organizationand mom-and-dad group and say, 'Look, theConservativesjust voted against school bus safety.'"

The Liberals deny they're playing games by puttingschool bus safety legislation into the marijuana bill.

"Absolutely not. That thought did not even cross our minds," said Attorney General Yasir Naqvi on Wednesday. "This is just conspiracy thinking in their own mind. There was no intention whatsoever on our part to play any political games with this."

Naqvisaid the government put the school bus camera law into the pot billto get it passed quickly.

Cameras can be positioned to capture the license plate of a vehicle passing a school bus in either direction. (CBC)

"We're finding an efficient way of making a good idea move forward," Naqvi told reporters at the legislature. "I just find it very odd that [the PCs]are feeling so defensive about this. I think they should celebrate their success. They raised a very important issue around making sure that our children are safe."

Progressive Conservative MPP Rick Nichollsfirst introduced such a bill in 2014. He revived itthis past February, but as recently as May the Liberal government expressed reservations.

"It just shows the cynicism of KathleenWynneand the Liberals," saidNDPleader AndreaHorwathon Wednesday."I find it very cynical that the Liberals continue to use omnibus legislation to try to wedge the other political parties."

The marijuana bill contains a section on road safety. While it includes new legislation on detecting and punishing drug-impaired drivers, it also wraps in the school bus camera rules.

"The travelling public wants to make sure these laws are passed so that they can have safety, and the means by which that occurs is less relevant to most people,"Transportation Minister Steven Del Ducasaid Wednesday.

Exterior cameras are mounted on some school buses in a range of provinces, including Alberta, Manitoba, Nova Scotia and P.E.I.

In Ontario, police in Ottawa and Thunder Bay have put cameras on school buses to try to catch drivers breaking the rules, while police and school officials in Waterloo region endorsed the idea. A month-longexperiment with cameras in Toronto in 2014 caught hundreds ofdrivers illegally zipping past the stopped buses.