This morning the Parliament debated The Road Safety Amendment (Medicinal Cannabis) Bill. The vast majority of speakers acknowledged that this is an issue that needs to be addressed.
— David Ettershank MP (@dettershankMP) March 8, 2023
Here are some of the highlights. #springst pic.twitter.com/vqINMfYyoo
Harriet Shing
Considering approximately 65,000 Victorians currently have a prescription for medicinal cannabis, it makes sense to look into things like driving with residual weed in your system.
Obviously, this doesn’t mean you’ll soon be able to go and get stoned out of your gourd and then drive to Macca’s. But it likely means people with a prescription won’t be pinged by the drug bus in the days after their doctor-ordered high.
Labor MP said work on changing the drug-driving laws has been happening for a few years, and finding the line between THC presence and being impaired by it was a “significant priority” to the government’s working group on the issues.
Legalise Cannabis MP told The Guardian she was “heartened” to see both sides of the Victorian government agree that the current drug-driving laws are unfair to those who use medical marijuana.
“The working group has actually discussed at length the complexities of this matter and the options and opportunities that might be available,” she said.
“We need … to find a way through all of this so that all drivers are able to be safe on our roads and so that we can provide those medical supports that Victorians need and indeed deserve.”
Rachel PayneThe post Vic’s Considering Changing Its ‘Unfair’ Drug Driving Laws To Accomodate Medical Weed Users appeared first on PEDESTRIAN.TV .