MP Blake Richards has some big concerns when it comes to the Liberal government's plan to approve pot.

As the federal government introduces their long awaited legislation, Richards shares he thought he would have more answers than he does.

How do we handle impaired drivers, workforce safety, legal age limit, mental health, and where does the plan take us in regards to organized crime? Richards feels in many cases the federal government will pass much of the responsibility on to the provincial governments.

"I don't think the provinces expected that. This is a promise that the Trudeau government made in the election so they should be responsible for keeping the promise, they should be responsible for answering those questions, and they shouldn't be downloading those on to the provinces to make those with a real short timeline to do it. It seems to me this hasn't been thought out and the details haven't been considered here."

Richards comments that while PC support of the legislation is mixed, they do stand united with their belief that the current proposed legislation is flawed.

With the federal government's plan to legalize recreational marijuana use by Canada Day 2018, Richards states provinces have expressed concern whether there is enough time to dot the i's and cross the t's on making this legislation safe for all Canadians.

Richards will continue to point out the unanswered questions and that Canadians across the country want and deserve a plan in place before legislation goes through.

"How are we going to deal with impaired driving, how are we going to deal with workforce safety, how are we going to ensure we are going to protect our young people? These are all things that should be expected and in many cases were promised by the government and they don't have any plan to deliver on those promises. This seems that it's rushed to me and I think it's something they need to go back to the drawing board and figure out how they are going to deal with these things. These are important issues to public safety and you can't compromise on the safety of the public."

Richards is looking for public feedback on his website in regards to the legislation.

"I encourage people to go on to my website, and click on the have your say; and give me their opinion and also what their thoughts are on the general issue; do they believe legalization is the right approach, would they favour an approach where marijuana is ticketed like a traffic offence, or do they believe it should remain illegal?!

To have your say go here.