Close X
Thursday, October 10, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Government Invites Public To Share Views On Marijuana Rules

The Canadian Press, 25 Sep, 2017 12:25 PM
    VANCOUVER — The British Columbia government is turning to the public before recreational marijuana is legalized for input on protecting children, making roads safer and keeping criminals out of the pot industry.
     
    Once marijuana is legalized next July, the provinces will regulate the retail sale of marijuana and can upgrade traffic safety laws to protect people on the roads from cannabis-impaired drivers.
     
    Solicitor General Mike Farnworth says he wants help shaping public health and safety issues in the public consultation process, which will also include a telephone survey.
     
    The government is asking people to share their views until Nov. 1.
     
    Farnworth announced the consultation process today at a convention of B.C. municipalities, which have been waiting for details of a marijuana plan, especially in Vancouver where local politicians have struggled to regulate pot shops for more than a year.
     
     
    Only a handful of marijuana dispensaries and compassion clubs had received business licences in Vancouver by the spring, while nearly 50 more development permits or business licences were under review.
     
    Many other pot shops continue to operate without licences, despite the potential of $250-a-day fines.
     
    Victoria has also taken steps to require dispensaries to obtain business licenses and is seeking an injunction to shut down one pot shop for bylaw violations, including consumption on site.
     
    Ontario already announced it will impose a minimum age of 19 for marijuana use, will only allow the drug to be sold in certain government liquor stores and will limit pot use solely to private residences.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Search Crews Recover Human Remains Off B.C. Highway Where Man Disappeared

    Search Crews Recover Human Remains Off B.C. Highway Where Man Disappeared
    DEASE LAKE, B.C. — Human remains have been discovered off a British Columbia highway near where a 70-year-old Alaska man went missing last year.

    Search Crews Recover Human Remains Off B.C. Highway Where Man Disappeared

    Ten Things To Know About The British Columbia Election

    Ten Things To Know About The British Columbia Election
    VANCOUVER — Voters in British Columbia go to the polls on Tuesday. Here are 10 things to know about B.C. politics:

    Ten Things To Know About The British Columbia Election

    Tight B.C. Election Puts Vote Splitting On Agenda In Campaign's Final Days

    NANAIMO, B.C. — British Columbia's political party leaders have been frantically crisscrossing the province, making their final appeals to voters who might still be swayed before casting their ballots Tuesday.

    Tight B.C. Election Puts Vote Splitting On Agenda In Campaign's Final Days

    28-Yr-Old Rohtak Woman Gets 7-year Jail For False Gangrape Complaint

    28-Yr-Old Rohtak Woman Gets 7-year Jail For False Gangrape Complaint
    The woman, Meenakshi, 28, had in June 2010 filed a complaint alleging she was gangraped by a Rohtak resident and his two brother-in-laws after they gave her lift in their car.

    28-Yr-Old Rohtak Woman Gets 7-year Jail For False Gangrape Complaint

    Search On For B.C. Fire Chief Who May Have Been Swept Away In Swollen Creek

    Search On For B.C. Fire Chief Who May Have Been Swept Away In Swollen Creek
    CACHE CREEK, B.C. — The RCMP says the fire chief of Cache Creek in British Columbia's Interior is missing and may have been swept away in a swollen creek.

    Search On For B.C. Fire Chief Who May Have Been Swept Away In Swollen Creek

    17-Year-Old Youth Injured In Multi-Vehicle Collision In Surrey Dies

    17-Year-Old Youth Injured In Multi-Vehicle Collision In Surrey Dies
    Police say he was one of three people hurt in two separate collisions on 64th Avenue on Wednesday night.

    17-Year-Old Youth Injured In Multi-Vehicle Collision In Surrey Dies