Canada Has Issued Few Pardons for Cannabis Crimes Since Reforms Passed in 2019

Since August 2019, Canada has issued just 845 pardons for cannabis crimes, according to Board of Pardon data outlined by the CBC. The government says it also doesn’t know how many possession records have been “sequestered” under a different program.  

Canada legalized cannabis federally in 2018 and the government estimated that 10,000 citizens would be eligible for conviction relief. The Parole Board of Canada told the CBD that more than 1,300 citizens applied for pardons but that hundreds of applications were either incomplete or ineligible.  

Andrew Tanenbaum, director of the non-profit organization Pardons Canada, told the CBC that the pardon process is tedious and that some Canadians with eligible records may be apathetic about applying.

An alternative was launched in 2022 that should automatically “sequester” records for simple possession, which would prevent records from showing up on background checks. That program gave the government two years to sequester some records for cannabis possession and other drugs, the report says, but NDP MP Randall Garrison – who backed the amendment to sequester records – told the CBC that “it’s clear [the program] doesn’t work.”

“It’s a bureaucratic nightmare. The amount of bureaucracy

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