Households and people who use drugs
- After Cabinet sets a date, simple possession of substances in Schedules I–IV would no longer be a federal crime. Police could not charge under CDSA section 4 because it would be repealed (Clause 5; Coming into Force).
- There would be no immediate replacement penalty. The bill asks for an “administrative sanctions” model to be considered in the strategy (for example, warnings, fines, or mandatory treatment referral), but it does not create one (National Strategy s.(2)(e)).
- The “Good Samaritan” overdose protections in section 4.1 would be repealed. Because simple possession would also no longer be an offence, those specific protections would no longer be needed for possession charges (Clause 5).
Workers and service users (health, social services)
- The strategy must consider expanding treatment, harm reduction, and other health diversion options, and how to fix access and capacity limits (National Strategy s.(2)(b)-(c)). This is a planning requirement, not new funding.
- Roles for health, social services, police, and courts must be defined in the strategy (National Strategy s.(2)(f)).
Police, courts, and justice system
- No CDSA charge for simple possession once the repeal is in force (Clause 5; Coming into Force).
- Trafficking, production, and other CDSA offences remain enforceable. The bill does not change those crimes.
- Limitation periods and “designated substance offence” definitions are updated to remove possession references (Clause 4; Clause 6).
- A national conference within 180 days will address coordination with provinces and territories (National Strategy s.(4)).
Provinces and territories, Indigenous partners, and communities
- Required consultations include provincial/territorial governments and First Nations, Inuit, and Métis persons and organizations (National Strategy s.(2)-(3)).
- The strategy must set national objectives and consider a possession threshold that, above a set amount, could remain criminalized. The bill itself does not set any threshold (National Strategy s.(2)(d)).
Employers, schools, and businesses
- No direct new obligations or liabilities in the bill.
- Workplace, campus, or service policies are unaffected by federal criminal-law changes unless changed by those organizations.