Lexpert US Guides

2019 Lexpert US Guide

The Lexpert Guides to the Leading US/Canada Cross-Border Corporate and Litigation Lawyers in Canada profiles leading business lawyers and features articles for attorneys and in-house counsel in the US about business law issues in Canada.

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www.lexpert.ca/usguide | LEXPERT • June 2019 | 47 cannabis for medical purposes, and 76 percent do so for recreational reasons. "So now that recreational cannabis is legal, it's clear to see it's a material and meaningful social and workplace issue." One reason for the lack of clarity is that rules and regulations are not uniform across the country. "While the federal Cannabis Act legalized recreational can- nabis," says Stephen Shamie, a senior labor and employment lawyer in the Toronto office of Hicks Morley LLP and the firm's managing partner. "Each province and territory has established its own statu- tory framework to deal with legalization, which, among other things, sets out the age at which an individual can buy, pos- sess, use and grow recreational cannabis." And, drilling down even further, adds Shamie, many municipalities across the ample, in terms of alcohol and medicinal cannabis in the workplace." He says employers in Canada have a duty to accommodate the medical use of can- nabis. "However, we don't have a duty to accommodate the recreational use of can- nabis. e only circumstance where that doesn't apply is if someone has an addiction to cannabis, much like if someone has an addiction to alcohol, then it becomes a dis- ability which has to be accommodated." Cannabis addiction is considered a dis- ability under most human rights legisla- tion, and employer policies should ensure that policies cover potential addiction is- sues with procedures to appropriately re- spond to such concerns, says Norton Rose Fulbright's Charney. "Yet just because an employee likes us- ing recreational cannabis doesn't make the country have also implemented regula- tions to address recreational cannabis and its sale or use. Some municipalities have passed by-laws to prevent the sale or use of cannabis, making each city dis- tinct in its rules and regulations. Hence, there is "certainly no 'one size fits all' ap- proach to recreational cannabis in Can- ada," says Shamie, "and employers need to be aware of the requirements that may vary by jurisdiction." e law may be evolving, but potential risks – think human rights, accommoda- tion, to name a few – need to be managed, but there are tools that may provide guid- ance, says Hendrik Nieuwland, a partner with Shields O'Donnell MacKillop LLP. "We're not reaching around in the dark; employers can draw on what has been learned regarding accommodation, for ex-

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