Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Police Want Complaint About Pot Dispensaries Dismissed

The Canadian Press, 17 Sep, 2015 01:17 PM
    Vancouver police are calling for the dismissal of a complaint before the city's police board that alleges the department isn't enforcing the law against illegal marijuana dispensaries.
     
    Pamela McColl of the group Smart Approaches to Marijuana Canada filed the complaint, which accuses the VPD of "failing in their duty to maintain law and order" by not shutting down all pot shops.
     
    Deputy Chief Doug LePard has responded in a 15-page report that will go before the police board today.
     
    He says using criminal law to shut down dispensaries is generally ineffective and a better tool is bylaw enforcement, which the city will soon have with its regulation of the dispensaries.
     
    LePard says the force will take action against dispensaries when public safety concerns exist, and has executed 11 search warrants and recommended multiple charges since 2013.
     
    Selling marijuana over the counter is illegal in Canada and last week Health Canada sent cease-and-desist letters to 13 pot stores warning of RCMP raids if they don't close.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Municipalities Eye OPP Negotiations To See If Benefit Is Whittled Out

    Municipalities Eye OPP Negotiations To See If Benefit Is Whittled Out
    TORONTO — Ontario municipalities are keeping a close eye on provincial police contract negotiations to see if the province can whittle out years-of-service bonuses that communities say are becoming difficult to afford.

    Municipalities Eye OPP Negotiations To See If Benefit Is Whittled Out

    Amanda Lindhout Thanks Mounties For Arresting Somalian Man Accused In Her Kidnapping

    Amanda Lindhout Thanks Mounties For Arresting Somalian Man Accused In Her Kidnapping
    OTTAWA — Amanda Lindhout crumpled to the floor, crying, as RCMP investigators broke the news to her on Thursday about the arrest of her alleged Somalian kidnapper.

    Amanda Lindhout Thanks Mounties For Arresting Somalian Man Accused In Her Kidnapping

    Officials Can't Explain Increase In North Bay Babies Born To Addicted Mothers

    Officials Can't Explain Increase In North Bay Babies Born To Addicted Mothers
    TORONTO — Community service workers in North Bay say they are dealing with an alarming increase in the number of babies born to mothers addicted to drugs.

    Officials Can't Explain Increase In North Bay Babies Born To Addicted Mothers

    Science Helps Trees Adapt To New Conditions Of A Changing Climate

    Science Helps Trees Adapt To New Conditions Of A Changing Climate
    "Trees are adapted to historical climate and the climate's moving out from under them," said evolutionary biologist Sally Aitken. 

    Science Helps Trees Adapt To New Conditions Of A Changing Climate

    Court Hearing To Decide Whether $432-million Settlement For Victims Can Go Ahead

    Court Hearing To Decide Whether $432-million Settlement For Victims Can Go Ahead
    A Quebec Superior Court justice will begin hearing arguments Monday that could determine whether more than $431 million can be distributed to victims and creditors of the Lac-Megantic, Que.

    Court Hearing To Decide Whether $432-million Settlement For Victims Can Go Ahead

    Ex-Senate Reform Allies Mystified By PM's Seeming Lack Of Plan For Senate

    Ex-Senate Reform Allies Mystified By PM's Seeming Lack Of Plan For Senate
    The prime minister distanced himself from the damning revelations in last week's audit of senators' expenses, explaining that "the Senate is an independent 

    Ex-Senate Reform Allies Mystified By PM's Seeming Lack Of Plan For Senate