Public memo · prepared for current publication

Public memo to Alberta MLAs.

A public memo from the Alberta Liberty & Lifestyle Rights Association, addressed to all Alberta MLAs regardless of caucus, on proportionate rules for lawful adult choices and credible youth enforcement. The association respectfully asks that this perspective be included in the public conversation alongside other voices.

About this memo This is a public memo intended for current publication. It does not represent any individual member's view; it represents the association's public position at the time of writing. It does not constitute legal or medical advice.

What we ask

The association asks Alberta MLAs to keep three things in view as Bill 208 — the Tobacco, Smoking and Vaping Reduction Amendment Act, 2026 — moves through the Legislature (Bill 208 PDF):

  1. Keep youth-access protection enforceable. Strong youth-access protection is the position members hold first. Alberta's existing inspection-and-enforcement framework is the mechanism that delivers it (Alberta — rules and enforcement).
  2. Treat licensed retailers as compliance partners. Licensed Alberta retailers run age verification, training, and refusal of sale every day. Their work is part of how youth access is actually prevented in practice; the association asks that the public framing reflect that.
  3. Hold proportion as a public test. Restrictions on lawful adult products without proportionate enforcement carry a displacement risk — adult demand moving toward unregulated supply that does not card and does not comply. The association asks that this risk be discussed openly rather than dismissed.

Why we are writing publicly

Public memos are part of how a small association can take part in a provincial conversation without overstating its weight. The memo is offered as a contribution to the record. The association has no privileged access to legislators and is not asking for any. We are asking that adults of legal age in Alberta — and the licensed retailers who serve them — be part of the conversation alongside other public voices.

Specific points for committee and chamber discussion

  • How will enforcement capacity be matched to the new restrictions Bill 208 introduces?
  • What will the Government of Alberta publish during the commencement window to monitor unintended consequences?
  • How will the regulation-making power for additional designated products be used, and with what consultation?
  • How will provincial communication continue to distinguish adult and youth context (Health Canada — preventing kids and teens) so the public can read provincial measures clearly?
  • How will the association's position — and the positions of other groups — be reflected in the public record (Alberta strategy PDF; prior What We Heard report, PDF)?

Closing

Thank you for reading. We acknowledge legislators receive many such memos. The association does not expect or seek a personal reply; we ask only that the perspective be on the record as the bill is debated.

Sources cited on this page