Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Plan To Ban Edible Pot While Licensing Dispensaries Sparks Debate

The Canadian Press, 11 Jun, 2015 12:20 PM
    VANCOUVER — If Vancouver has its way, the dozens of illegal pot shops scattered across the city will soon have business licences and health warnings hanging in their windows.
     
    But the city's plans to ban edible products, forbid selling to minors and force stores located in troubled neighbourhoods to move are sparking criticism at a public hearing this week.
     
    "I am a patient who does not want to smoke, as I value my lungs and health," said Brina Levitt, an owner of Green Penguin Delights, a company that makes marijuana products.
     
    "I suffer from back pain and insomnia. My preferred method of medication is in ready-made edible form."
     
    The debate began Wednesday, a day before the Supreme Court of Canada was to decide whether patients should be allowed to consume edible pot. More than 160 people are set to speak at the Vancouver hearing and it is expected to drag on for days.
     
    The city is proposing new regulations to control the rapid growth of illegal marijuana dispensaries, which have multiplied from fewer than 20 to 94 over the past three years.
     
    The regulations would include a new business licence category, a $30,000 fee and a requirement that stores be 300 metres away from schools, community centres and other pot shops.
     
    Stores in certain neighbourhoods — the Downtown Eastside, Granville entertainment district and on Pender Street — would be forced to move or close. Individuals or agencies would be allowed up to five licences.
     
    City manager Penny Ballem said the goal of the "precedent-setting" plan is to reduce youth exposure and serious crime.
     
    "We have tried to achieve a really balanced approach here to allow people who need to access marijuana for medical issues to be actually able to do that, but to protect the public," she said.
     
    "Some people think we're too strict and some people's input is that we're too lenient."
     
    Connor Fesenmaier told council that his organization, Smart Approaches to Marijuana Canada, is boycotting the debate because the federal government has made it clear dispensaries are illegal.
     
     
    "These hearings should not be taking place," he said. "It remains an open question as to whether or not civic servants or employees can be charged for conspiring to violate federal laws." 
     
    Among the many speakers who opposed the city's ban on edible products was Kirk Tousaw, a lawyer involved in the Supreme Court challenge. He warned Vancouver's policy would force people to buy brownies and cookies on the black market.
     
    One speaker, Cheryl Rose, pleaded with council not to ban selling to minors. She said her 22-year-old daughter, Hayley, suffers from a severe form of epilepsy and began taking medical cannabis at 15.
     
    Vancouver Coastal Health chief medical health officer Dr. Patricia Daly said marijuana affects brain development in youth and it may result in earlier onset of psychosis and schizophrenia in those with a genetic predisposition.
     
    Selling marijuana over the counter is illegal in Canada — regardless of whether it's medical or recreational — and the federal government has strongly warned against the proposal.
     
    The city has said that the federal government's strict medical marijuana laws have fostered the rise of dispensaries in Vancouver. 
     
    The hearing will resume Thursday evening.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Man Gets 2.5 Years In Prison After Crash That Left Nurse With Spinal-Cord Injury

    B.C. Man Gets 2.5 Years In Prison After Crash That Left Nurse With Spinal-Cord Injury
    A 22-year-old B.C. man has been sentenced to two and a half years in prison for a hit-and-run crash that left a licensed practical nurse a quadriplegic.

    B.C. Man Gets 2.5 Years In Prison After Crash That Left Nurse With Spinal-Cord Injury

    $20-Million Fund To Help Sex Workers Get Out Of The Industry Is 'Over-Subscribed'

    $20-Million Fund To Help Sex Workers Get Out Of The Industry Is 'Over-Subscribed'
    There are more groups than money available for the government's proposed $20 million plan to get sex workers out of the industry, Justice Minister Peter MacKay said Friday.

    $20-Million Fund To Help Sex Workers Get Out Of The Industry Is 'Over-Subscribed'

    Yosef Gopaul Sentenced To 12 Years In Prison For Killing Surrey Hockey Mom; Says Sorry, Wants Rehab

    Yosef Gopaul Sentenced To 12 Years In Prison For Killing Surrey Hockey Mom; Says Sorry, Wants Rehab
     The family of a British Columbia woman whose motto was "money isn't worth dying for" wept as a 28-year-old man was sentenced for manslaughter after blindsiding her with a rock to the head outside a neighbourhood ice arena.

    Yosef Gopaul Sentenced To 12 Years In Prison For Killing Surrey Hockey Mom; Says Sorry, Wants Rehab

    Vancouver Aquarium Dolphin Hana In Critical Condition After Surgery

    One of two Pacific white-sided dolphins at the Vancouver Aquarium is in critical condition after groundbreaking emergency surgery for a gastrointestinal disorder.

    Vancouver Aquarium Dolphin Hana In Critical Condition After Surgery

    Shooting Outside Coquitlam Centre Mall Puts A Man In Hospital, Gunman On Loose

    Shooting Outside Coquitlam Centre Mall Puts A Man In Hospital, Gunman On Loose
    The shooting that put the unidentified man in hospital with non-life-threatening injuries took place Friday at about 2:45 p.m. in a parking lot at Coquitlam Centre

    Shooting Outside Coquitlam Centre Mall Puts A Man In Hospital, Gunman On Loose

    RCMP Say Man Known For Fleeing Police Arrested After Action-Packed Pursuit In Nanaimo

    RCMP Say Man Known For Fleeing Police Arrested After Action-Packed Pursuit In Nanaimo
    Police say the 31-year-old man was wanted for a number of property- and driving-related offences in Ladysmith and Duncan and was being monitored by RCMP.

    RCMP Say Man Known For Fleeing Police Arrested After Action-Packed Pursuit In Nanaimo