 Our next speaker is from the Mana Party. She is easily one of my favourite politicians in the country, quite frankly. She will win the seat of Waiareke in six months time. Ladies and gentlemen, Annette Sykes of Mana. manuhiri tai mae mae tā wahi ki te paganui te kaupapotaranei tēnā koutau. Wara't oku tē, caininaw pделofa選, magiw tao mwawto angoza, mi jumiaika ka garasu w전에 ngamai p díasb, gika mae pAAGM beti twhe mw carefully cajitori  rowslen mwawto angoza pia garasa menga ki te huasianami komunitua mawe mwawto angoza ma kuua. Fay tem되a tē wa a w faltanama te i wstrithu tētu sythuste sanha mawta to be racially profiled and arrested on cannabis-related offences. As a result of that arrest, they end up in terms of incarceration not for possession of cannabis, but for breach of bail or failure to adhere to appearance requirements in court. Following a term of incarceration, it is very unlikely that the health needs of any perceived or actual problem are special conditions of parole. So, therefore, when we start on a particular policy like this one, we want to see how the mass incarceration of Māori and Pacific Island people are going to be alleviated in the kinds of reforms that have been proposed. The second issue is that the Treaty is fundamental in the founding of our movement. So when we started on the cannabis reform issue, we looked to how cannabis was invited into the communities in this country and, amazingly, Queen Victoria again, who was so pivotal in the Treaty, was the person that had suggested to the nuns of the Ape Whanganui River that they bring cannabis into that community to assist in rungua as a period pain alleviation for stress and harm. So for us in our developing of a policy, we then said that for those kinds of substances to become part of our communities, there must be seen to be some wellbeing or health benefit from that and we need to balance any policy against the fact that there can actually be negative and ill health outcomes like the great consumption of tobacco and alcohol, like the great consumption of fast foods that will need some regulation to ensure that those communities are not negatively impacted upon. So our starting point has been that and I'm pleased to say at present we are very much in favour of cannabis for medicinal purposes and that is the present part of our policy. Now moving to the Psychoactive Substances Bill and I hope after this conference my nickname Cyclone doesn't end up being Psycho. One of the key issues that we are really concerned about is the fact that the legalisation of legal highs has actually made it available to communities that have less education about the impacts of overuse of those legal highs. So you will see mana at the forefront, not just of council prohibition of those legal highs but preventing the sale of it and then the on sale and underground distribution networks that aren't legal that are part of the underground economy which actually participates and makes up poor communities. So we have been at the front of prohibition of those where we have seen the profit incentive not balanced against the need to ensure the well-being of our communities. Finally in terms of our proposal I personally am in favour of decriminalisation I want to say that but that is a raging debate amongst us in our movement. What I can say is that we will be guided by our members and our communities on that issue but as a starting point te Ōrunga o te Tangata, the well-being of the individual and the family will be our guiding value. Kia ora.