Pot smoking to be allowed on UBC campus - Action News
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British Columbia

Pot smoking to be allowed on UBC campus

The University of British Columbia is crafting a policy that will allow cannabis use on campus keeping in line with its policy on tobacco once recreational marijuana becomes legal in Canada. But a majority of post-secondary schools seem prepared to stick with smoke-free policies.

65 of 260 university-college campuses have outlawed smoking, vaping or plan to: Canadian Cancer Society report

A UBC draft policy will permit cannabis smoking on campus, restricted to areas where tobacco smoking and vaping are permitted. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

One by one, Canadian universities are coming up with fresh policies to prepare forcannabis legalization on Oct. 17. There's atrendto mirror tobacco policies which on many campusesmeans a ban on cannabis smoking or vaping.

At the University of British Columbia, planners appear to be sticking to the trend, but according to a draft policy, that means UBCwill allow people to enjoy a toke in large areas at the Vancouver campus, and, in some, so-called smoking gazebos onthe Okanagancampus.

"We're a university, so we're really focused on evidence-based decision-making," said Hubert Lai, UBC'suniversity counsel. "The research is suggesting that, actually, behaviour by individuals is not going to change in a material way after decriminalization occurs."

UBCVancouver rules limit all types of smoking in the so-called health precinct, wherehospital and other medical buildings are clustered. Smoking is also forbiddeninside all buildingsand within eight metres of any doorway on campus.

At residences, cannabis possession is strictly regulated, and although there are designated smoking areas on residence property, no cannabis smoking will be allowed.

However, on the vast campus, officials have left ample space for people who wish to uselegal cannabis.

"One of the effects that people have observed that researchers have observed is that when you criminalize activity that people are engaging in any way, all you do is drive the behaviour underground," said Lai.

"That could create unexpected consequences, so we don't want to make poor policy decisions in that way."

'The culture that's already here'

For students, getting a waftof pot at UBC is already a relatively routine experience, and so the news that cannabis will be allowedisn't a major shock.

"I think it makes sense.To put in place any other regulations would go against the culture that's already here," said Joseph Paris, a graduate historystudent.

"It's like cigarettes.If you don't smoke around doorwaysand things like that ... I think it's fine," said Paris.

Grace Tadrous, who's in her fifth year of a kinesiology degree, said smoking on campus is generally fine, but pot may cross the line.

"I think it's a pretty big campus and it's a lot of outdoors, so you can't really it doesn't really affect you if people are smoking," said Tadrous.

"I think [cannabis] should be done in a little bit more private areas, not just around where you're trying to learn and have an educational environment," she said.

Cancer society wants smoke-free campuses

The Canadian Cancer Society published a report this month urging campuses across the country to become smoke free meaning, no tobacco or cannabis.

The report counts 65 of the country's roughly 260 university and college campuses that have outlawed smoking and vapingor have plans to do so.

The report argues that smoke-free policies provide healthier environments, reduce litter and discourage tobacco use among young people.

In B.C.,Kwantlen Polytechnic University,Langara College,Douglas College,University of the Fraser Valley andTrinity Western University have gone smoke free, but several institutions, including UBC, have not.

UBC's draft cannabis policy will take effect with legalization, but it will be open to consultation into 2019 and may be subject to change.

With files fromNomie Moukanda


Follow Rafferty Baker on Twitter: @raffertybaker