Close X
Thursday, November 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Police Crack Down On Pop-Up Pot Vendors After Weeks-Long Stalemate

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jan, 2018 11:42 AM
    VANCOUVER — Police appear to be cracking down on pop-up stalls selling marijuana while frustrations mount over the open-air market operating in a prominent square in downtown Vancouver.
     
     
    A spokesman for the Vancouver Police Department declined comment on what he called an ongoing investigation, but vendors said Monday that officers raided merchants' tables in Robson Square the night before and arrested several sellers.
     
     
    Pop-up pot stalls began appearing on a monthly basis about two years ago in the pedestrian-only plaza, but vendors have been setting up with increasing frequency in recent weeks, selling everything from dried marijuana to cannabis-infused edibles.
     
     
    Ron Woodruff said he was thrown to the ground by police while trying to film the raid as a bystander.
     
     
    The longtime vendor said the Robson Square market is more about harm reduction than it is about profit, and described marijuana as a tool in the fight against an opioid overdose crisis that has killed hundreds of people in British Columbia.
     
     
    "We're helping people. We're not hurting people. And that's why they don't want to go away," Woodruff said. "This isn't anarchy. This is about people who care about people."
     
     
    Vancouver Coun. Melissa De Genova said she has heard mounting concerns from residents who are upset and want the city to intervene.
     
     
    "They're outraged," De Genova said. "I mean, this is a public place, a public plaza. It's supposed to be family-friendly."
     
     
     
     
    Bylaw officers began attempts to remove the vendors in November, starting with verbal warnings, said city spokesman Jag Sandhu. Since then, the city has issued 12 tickets, worth $1,000 each, and impounded three tents.
     
     
    But De Genova said the city doesn't have enough enforcement officers to deal with all the stalls that keep popping up, adding that it is unfair for legitimate businesses who buy an operating licence and follow the rules when other vendors get away with shirking city regulations.
     
     
    Charles Gauthier of the Downtown Vancouver Business Improvement Association called for the city to step in and put an end to the "illegal, open-air drug market."
     
     
    Allowing pot peddlers to operate freely while at the same time requiring other outlets, such as food trucks and marijuana dispensaries, to pay licensing fees and comply with bylaws creates a double standard and leads to friction in the business community, he added.
     
     
    "If I made bathtub gin and bottled it and went there and sold it on the street, I suspect that I would be shut down pretty quickly," he said.
     
     
    Sgt. Jason Robillard said the police have been keeping tabs on the Robson Square stalls over the past couple of years but the department has to prioritize its resources based on public safety.
     
     
    He said the situation in the public plaza has recently escalated and police have received complaints about the marijuana marketplace.
     
     
    Robillard said more information would be made public later in the week.
     
     
    Neil Magnuson, a marijuana vendor and director of the Cannabis Substitution Project, said the Robson Square market is a vital health service that saves lives every day.
     
     
    A hundred edibles are given away at the market every day to people in need and a police crackdown is unconscionable, he said.
     
     
    "We are far more here as a protest and as a harm-reduction site than a business site," Magnuson said. "The business here supports the harm reduction that we're doing."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Large Fire Erupts When Truck Carrying Ethanol Hits Train At B.C. Rail Yard

    Large Fire Erupts When Truck Carrying Ethanol Hits Train At B.C. Rail Yard
    Firefighters were still on the scene of a large fire in Port Coquitlam, B.C., late Monday after a collision in a CP Rail yard.

    Large Fire Erupts When Truck Carrying Ethanol Hits Train At B.C. Rail Yard

    Kwantlen Polytechnic University Goes Smoke-Free

    Kwantlen Polytechnic University Goes Smoke-Free
    The university is poised to become only the third post-secondary institution in B.C. to ban smoking on its premises, starting Jan. 21, 2018.

    Kwantlen Polytechnic University Goes Smoke-Free

    Tsunami Fears Send People In B.C. To Higher Ground; Warning Ends After Quake

    Tsunami Fears Send People In B.C. To Higher Ground; Warning Ends After Quake
    VANCOUVER — A tsunami warning issued for coastal British Columbia was cancelled Tuesday morning after people living along parts of the province's coast evacuated to higher ground when a powerful earthquake struck off Alaska.

    Tsunami Fears Send People In B.C. To Higher Ground; Warning Ends After Quake

    Firefighters In Surrey, B.C. Help Develop Software To Combat Overdose Crisis

    Firefighters In Surrey, B.C. Help Develop Software To Combat Overdose Crisis
    The fire department has partnered with Vancouver-based software developer GINQO to create a program that mines data from dispatch calls in real-time to identify clusters of overdoses.

    Firefighters In Surrey, B.C. Help Develop Software To Combat Overdose Crisis

    P.E.I. Legion To Apologize After Sikh Man Reportedly Asked To Remove Headdress

    P.E.I. Legion To Apologize After Sikh Man Reportedly Asked To Remove Headdress
    TIGNISH, P.E.I. — The president of a P.E.I. branch of the Royal Canadian Legion is expected to apologize after a Sikh man was reportedly asked to remove his religious head covering and heckled with racist remarks.

    P.E.I. Legion To Apologize After Sikh Man Reportedly Asked To Remove Headdress

    Kingston, Ont., Woman, 42, Charged After Being Found Naked In Stranger's Bathtub

    Kingston, Ont., Woman, 42, Charged After Being Found Naked In Stranger's Bathtub
    They say that when the complainant arrived home on Sunday evening, she found the nude woman in the unfilled tub

    Kingston, Ont., Woman, 42, Charged After Being Found Naked In Stranger's Bathtub

    PrevNext