Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Surge In Storefront Pot Dispensaries Has Caught Some Municipalities By Surprise

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Apr, 2016 02:46 PM
    TORONTO — A recent spike in the number of storefront marijuana dispensaries in parts of the country is prompting calls for the government to regulate an area not covered by current legislation.
     
    The Canadian Association of Medical Cannabis Dispensaries estimates there are at least 350 such storefronts in Canada, with dozens opening in Toronto alone in the past few months.
     
    Opponents say the storefront dispensaries are technically illegal and should be closed immediately.
     
    But medical marijuana advocates say the answer is to introduce regulations to standardize the quality of the product they sell and the criteria for clients looking to buy it.
     
    They say dispensaries fill a huge void for Canadians not covered by existing laws governing medical pot either distributed by mail or grown at home.
     
    Advocates say they hope the burgeoning industry will be regulated when Ottawa moves to legalize marijuana next year.
     
    The association's outgoing president, Jamie Shaw, said the recent surge has caught several municipalities by surprise even though the factors that allowed them to flourish have been in place for some time.
     
    Shaw attributes the popularity of dispensaries to both a long-standing need for medical marijuana and existing Canadian laws that make it difficult for patients to obtain it.
     
    "If you close down a dispensary, somebody else is going to open up because there's a need that's not being addressed," she said in a telephone interview. "Once those start opening, it becomes an avalanche. You can't keep up from an enforcement perspective."
     
    The current law, known as the Marihuana for Medical Purposes Regulations (MMPR), allows a few dozen government-licensed distributors to send weed to approved patients by mail order only.
     
    The system came into effect in 2014 and replaced the Medical Marihuana Access Regulations (MMAR), which gave about 30,000 patients permission to grow their own product at home. Ottawa tried to repeal that law, but a recent court injunction means those patients are still allowed to continue cultivating marijuana themselves.
     
    Cannabis industry consultant Eric Nash said the two systems combined only serve the needs of about 80,000 Canadians, well short of the number of estimated medical marijuana users in the country. The last Canadian Alcohol and Drug Use Monitoring Survey published by Health Canada pegged the total number around 420,000 in 2011. Health Canada did not respond to requests for fresher data or comments for this story.
     
    Nash said many patients are uncomfortable with the mail order system, feeling reluctant to disclose confidential medical information to a company.
     
     
    "It's an Amazon.com-based approach. You get on the web, you order your product, it comes to your door," he said.
     
    "That doesn't work for everyone."
     
    Nash said the hundreds of thousands of patients not covered by existing laws can feel drawn to storefront dispensaries that may allow them to ask questions about production, smell the product and generally vet it for quality.
     
    But Nash said existing dispensaries do not have to abide by any standards. Individual stores decide how to maintain client files, obtain products for sale and validate a patient's criteria to make a purchase in the first place.
     
    "There's a lot more leeway there in terms of the clients that they're catering to," Nash said. "(Dispensary services) may be under the auspices of medical need, but the medical need is very broad in context. Often times you can walk in and walk out the door within five minutes with product in hand."
     
    Some municipal politicians have voiced concerns based on the more lax approach. Cities such as Vancouver and Victoria have crafted city bylaws granting dispensaries business licences that allow them to operate, but the practice is still technically against Canadian law.
     
    In Toronto, where no such business licensing bylaws apply, at least one councillor has spoken up. Joe Cressy said he fully supports the legalization of marijuana, but cautions that the law has not shifted yet.
     
    "In the interim, a federal law remains in place regarding the distribution of cannabis, including specific rules for the important use of medicinal marijuana," Cressy said in an email. "That is the federal law today, and is enforceable."
     
    Shaw said the association has developed a set of 70 guidelines and best practices for dispensaries dealing with everything from product quality control to verifying the legitimacy of a prescription.
     
     
    But she said such guidelines will have little impact without input and co-operation from all orders of government, which she said could go a long way to helping other cities experiencing a spike like Toronto's.
     
    "If you wait too long to regulate, it becomes very difficult to implement a regulatory program for a vast number of businesses that were opened without that regulatory program," she said. "Cities can only do so much."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Group Wants Better Education About Genocide For Canadian High-School Students

    Group Wants Better Education About Genocide For Canadian High-School Students
    Her late mother, Ann Kazimirski, was a Holocaust survivor who championed the cause until her death 10 years ago.

    Group Wants Better Education About Genocide For Canadian High-School Students

    Mothers Of Drug Victims To Carry Their Children's Voices To United Nations

    Mothers Of Drug Victims To Carry Their Children's Voices To United Nations
    May's daughter Jac, 35, died on Aug. 21, 2012, after overdosing on pain medication prescribed to help her cope with a flesh-eating disease she'd contracted after years of addiction and life on the streets.

    Mothers Of Drug Victims To Carry Their Children's Voices To United Nations

    Signs Point To End Of 16 Years Of NDP In Manitoba Election Tuesday

    WINNIPEG — One of Canada's two remaining NDP governments finds itself on the ropes as it heads into an election Tuesday with polls suggesting Manitoba voters are ready to turn to the Progressive Conservatives.

    Signs Point To End Of 16 Years Of NDP In Manitoba Election Tuesday

    Precarious Work, Technological Advances Drive Basic Income Interest

    Precarious Work, Technological Advances Drive Basic Income Interest
    The amount increased depending on the number of people living in each household, maxing out at $3,969, or nearly $23,500 in 2016 currency, for a family of five or more.

    Precarious Work, Technological Advances Drive Basic Income Interest

    Facebook's Demands For Users' Photo IDs To Unlock Accounts Inappropriate: Lawyer

    Facebook's Demands For Users' Photo IDs To Unlock Accounts Inappropriate: Lawyer
    TORONTO — Thousands of Sarah Bell's online friends knew her only by her roller derby nickname, R'effin Adora Bell.

    Facebook's Demands For Users' Photo IDs To Unlock Accounts Inappropriate: Lawyer

    Trial Over Infant Remains In Storage Locker Could Hinge On Experts: Lawyer

    Trial Over Infant Remains In Storage Locker Could Hinge On Experts: Lawyer
    Andrea Giesbrecht's trial before a judge alone is to begin Monday. She was arrested in October 2014 shortly after the remains were discovered, but she has been on bail for a year.

    Trial Over Infant Remains In Storage Locker Could Hinge On Experts: Lawyer