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Alberta’s Family Violence Laws: Intersections, Inconsistencies and Access to Justice

By: Jennifer Koshan, Irene Oh and Kristin McDonald

PDF Version: Alberta’s Family Violence Laws: Intersections, Inconsistencies and Access to Justice

Attached Summary Chart

November is Family Violence Prevention Month in Alberta. Law has an important role to play in prevention efforts through the ways it defines family violence, which may have educative and normative influences on the public. Law can also contribute to prevention in more material ways by providing remedies to enable victims to protect themselves and their children and by requiring perpetrators to seek counselling and other programming. But laws are only useful where they are accessible. This post describes and analyzes all of the Alberta laws and government policies pertaining to family violence, paying particular attention to the intersections and inconsistencies between them and how these might impact victims, perpetrators, children and their access to justice. While the map of laws in a single province is complex in itself, there are also federal laws relevant to domestic violence that add to this complexity – for example, for families seeking remedies under the Divorce Act, RSC 1985 c 3 (2nd Supp), and for First Nations victims of violence living on reserve, who may not have access to provincial protection order remedies (see here). The research set out in this post is part of a larger project on domestic violence and access to justice, funded by SSHRC and the Law Foundation of Ontario’s Access to Justice Fund, which is mapping legislation and government policies relevant to domestic violence across Canada. We will eventually make our research available on a website that is aimed at trusted intermediaries, those who provide services to victims and perpetrators in domestic violence cases. We also hope that this research is useful to litigants, lawyers, judges, policy-makers and other professionals who work in this area. The Alberta research is also available in a chart format that is attached above.

Let’s Talk About Access to Information in Alberta: Part One

By: Shaun Fluker and Drew Yewchuk

PDF Version: Let’s Talk About Access to Information in Alberta: Part One

Legislation Commented On: Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, RSA 2000, c F-25

The Faculty’s Public Interest Law Clinic handles a lot of inquiries from the community that engage with Alberta’s access to information legislation: the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, RSA 2000, c F-25 (FOIP Act). Simply put, there is a high demand for the disclosure of information collected, produced and otherwise held by state officials. The Information and Privacy Commissioner, who serves as an officer of the Legislature (FOIP Act, s 45), is responsible for overseeing the administration of the FOIP Act with the assistance of the Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner (OIPC). In its 2015-2016 and 2016-2017 reports to the Legislative Assembly the OIPC indicated the access to information process in Alberta is approaching a crisis. Since commencing operations in 2015, the Public Interest Law Clinic has developed some expertise on working within the FOIP Act, and we would agree the system needs some critical attention. This post summarizes our current observations in this regard and, as the title to this post suggests, we see this as the beginning of a longer conversation. In order to illustrate the process and some of the problems within it, we refer to a request for information filed by the Clinic in July 2017, which is still ongoing, with respect to a creative environmental sentence imposed on CN Rail (see here for details on the offence and the creative sentence).

Recommendations for Endangered Species Legislation

By: Shaun Fluker

PDF Version: Recommendations for Endangered Species Legislation

Matter Commented On: Protecting Biodiversity in British Columbia: Recommendations for an Endangered Species Law in BC by a Species at Risk Expert Panel

This past summer I had the privilege of being invited to join a panel of conservation and biodiversity experts in British Columbia to develop a set of recommendations for endangered species legislation. The work is timely in that province, as the British Columbia government has announced plans to enact dedicated species at risk legislation. Members of the expert panel drew from their experience working within the science and policy of endangered species recovery and protection to put together a set of recommendations for the British Columbia government to consider as it works towards new legislation. The Report was published today, and it can be found here. Some of the recommendations in the Report are similar to those set out in A Proposal for Effective Legal Protection for Endangered Species Legislation in Alberta, including the need for provisions that ensure recovery measures are guided by science rather than politics. British Columbia currently has much the same legal framework as Alberta for endangered species legislation, which I described many years ago in Endangered species under Alberta’s Wildlife Act: Effective legal protection? as woefully inadequate and ineffective. British Columbia appears poised to change matters for the better within its borders. Will Alberta do the same?

Casting Light into The Shadows: Finding Civil Contempt in the Envacon Decision

By: Lisa Silver

PDF Version: Casting Light into The Shadows: Finding Civil Contempt in the Envacon Decision

Case Commented On: Envacon Inc v 829693 Alberta Ltd, 2018 ABCA 313 (Envacon)

Case law and common sense tells us there must be a bright line drawn between civil and criminal matters. From standard of proof to sanctioning, civil justice diverges significantly from criminal justice. Despite this great divide, there are occasions when the two areas meet. When that occurs, the law creates something singular, defying categorization. Civil contempt is one such area. In the recent Alberta Court of Appeal decision in Envacon the Court grapples with these distinctions by emphasizing the criminal law character of civil contempt. The question raised by this decision is whether civil contempt’s criminal law character should dominate the proper interpretation of this unique application of law.

The Future of Medical Cannabis

By: Lorian Hardcastle

PDF Version: The Future of Medical Cannabis

Legislation commented on: Access to Cannabis for Medical Purposes Regulations, SOR/2016-230

The recent decriminalization of recreational cannabis, which I explored in an earlier blog post, has led some to question whether Canada still requires a separate legislative scheme for medical cannabis users. On the one hand, some argue that health professionals should not spend their time writing prescriptions for something that can now be purchased in stores, particularly given the mixed evidence in support of medical cannabis. In stark contrast, others argue that a single regulatory regime would affect the rights of medical users and hinder their ability to access cannabis products.

Medical Cannabis in Canada

Canadians who currently wish to consume cannabis for medical purposes must first obtain what is referred to as a “medical document” from a health care professional (a physician or nurse practitioner). They may then purchase cannabis from a federally-licensed producer, register with Health Canada to produce a limited amount of cannabis for their own medical purposes, or designate someone to produce this supply for them.

According to data from Health Canada, in June 2018 alone (the most recent month for which data is available), Canadians purchased 2,103 kilograms of dried cannabis and 4,124 kilograms of cannabis oil for medical purposes, licensed producers made 135,062 cannabis shipments to Canadians, and 3,836 health care practitioners provided medical documents for patients registered with licensed producers. As of the end of June 2018, there were 21,521 active Canadian users registered with a licensed producer, 20,346 users who produced their own cannabis for medical purposes, and 1,195 who had designated someone else to produce it for them.

At this time, Health Canada has decided to retain this separate medical cannabis regime. In other words, while medical users can continue to purchase cannabis in the same manner as they had prior to decriminalization of recreational cannabis, they can also forego the need to obtain medical documentation and purchase these products from provincial or territorial retail outlets.

The Role of Health Professionals in Medical Cannabis

Perhaps the loudest and most prominent opponent to retaining the dual recreational and medical cannabis regimes is the Canadian Medical Association (CMA). It has recommended phasing out the medical cannabis regulations, noting that there is “no need for two systems” as cannabis “will be available for those who wish to use it for medicinal purposes, either with or without medical authorization, and for those who wish to use it for other purposes.”

The CMA’s position is that they are concerned “about the lack of clinical research, guidance and regulatory oversight for cannabis as a potential medical intervention.” Furthermore, they note that many physicians are uncomfortable “prescribing a substance that hasn’t undergone the same regulatory review processes required for all other prescription medicines”, which result in comprehensive information for prescribers relating to clinical indications, dosages, and potential interactions with other medications. One St. Albert doctor controversially went so far as to say “I can’t prescribe alcohol, I can’t prescribe trips to Hawaii, and so I don’t prescribe marijuana… [I’m] not saying it doesn’t make people feel better, but it’s not a medication.”

There is support for the CMA’s position that there is a lack of high-quality evidence respecting the medical efficacy of cannabis. For example, a recent guideline published in Canadian Family Physician, a peer-reviewed medical journal, involved a detailed systematic review of the evidence on medical cannabis use. The authors recommended limiting medical cannabis due to a concern with a lack of evidence, apart from a small subset of medical conditions: neuropathic pain, palliative and end-of-life pain, chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting, and spasticity due to multiple sclerosis or spinal cord injury. A recent review of the medical cannabis literature by University of Calgary researchers concluded that “there is only low to moderate quality evidence to suggest that cannabis is an effective treatment for most medical conditions.”

In response to the CMA’s position, it could be argued that a lack of high-quality evidence on medical cannabis supports more involvement by health professionals rather than less, in order to ensure that patients are properly informed of these evidentiary limits and that they are using cannabis appropriately. Divorcing themselves from informing patients about a product with potentially significant health implications is arguably an abdication of their responsibilities. In this regard, the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta has stated that physician responsibilities include, “providing objective, evidence-based information to patients seeking medical cannabis to support informed decision-making.” If patients self-prescribe cannabis for their medical conditions and purchase it from recreational retail outlets, they will not receive potentially important information about its efficacy for their particular conditions, alternative medical treatments, or potential medication interactions.

In contrast to their physician counterparts, the Canadian Nurses Association has said that it is in favour of retaining a separate system for medical cannabis, worrying that a single recreational legislative scheme may result in patients not talking with health care providers about cannabis use.

The Concerns of Medical Users

Medical cannabis users and advocacy groups argue in favour of retaining a separate legal regime for a variety of reasons. Some fear that producers may be encouraged to focus their efforts on more economically viable recreational products over the existing medical products that users have come to depend upon. Other users argue that patients may not feel confident talking with health professionals if cannabis is perceived as a recreational rather than medical product. In an article in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, Cairns and Kelly argue that “having only one stream continues to fuel the stigma surrounding cannabinoid-based therapeutics and delegitimizes patients who state that they use these drugs out of necessity rather than choice.” Many medical users struggle with the cost of cannabis, due to a lack of insurance coverage. Although an increasing number of insurers are covering medical cannabis for certain conditions, progress could be halted with the abolition of the medical cannabis regulatory scheme.

Creating a single recreational cannabis regime may also raise human rights concerns. Provincial laws protect those who use cannabis for medical purposes related to a disability from discrimination in the context of employment, housing, and other areas. For example, a landlord has a duty to accommodate the consumption of medical cannabis by a tenant up to the point of undue hardship. If existing regulations are abolished and doctors no longer provide medical documentation to patients who use cannabis for their health conditions, these patients may have difficulty establishing their disability-based claims for accommodation.

Health Canada’s Approach

Health Canada has stated that it plans to review whether there is an ongoing need for separate sets of medical and recreational cannabis regulations within five years. In the meantime, policy-makers have taken several steps to improve the evidentiary basis for medical cannabis, which will enable them to make a more informed decision about whether to keep the medical regulations. For example, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research have earmarked specific funds for cannabis research in urgent priority areas. The Cannabis Regulations, SOR/20180-144, which recently came into force, were designed to encourage research by including a specific category of license for those seeking to conduct research on cannabis (in addition to those licenses relating to cultivation, production, etc.). However, research on cannabis can be challenging. Compared to pharmaceuticals, which are synthetically manufactured in near-identical conditions in factories, the composition of even genetically-identical cannabis plants can vary due to environmental differences in soil and lighting, resulting in study design challenges.


This post may be cited as: Lorian Hardcastle, “The Future of Medical Cannabis” (October 18, 2018), online: ABlawg, http://ablawg.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Blog_LH_Future_of_Medical_Cannabis_Oct2018.pdf

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