Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Pot Regulations Will Restrict Patient Access: Civil Liberties' Group

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jun, 2015 01:01 PM
    VANCOUVER — The British Columbia Civil Liberties Association is applauding Vancouver city council for regulating medical marijuana dispensaries but is warning the new bylaws are too restrictive.
     
    Policy director Micheal Vonn says patients will see their right to edible pot — granted in a recent Supreme Court of Canada decision — disappear with the city's ban on brownies and cookies from storefronts.
     
    She also says the city's requirement that dispensaries be at least 300 metres from schools, community centres and each other promotes an unfair stigma.
     
    Council voted 8-3 on Wednesday to create a two-tiered system that imposes a $1,000 licence fee on non-profit compassion clubs and a $30,000 fee on for-profit pot shops.
     
    Vonn is praising the lower fee for compassion clubs but says the higher fee for other dispensaries still appears to be more than what the city would need to recover costs.
     
    She says she appreciates that the city stepped into a "regulatory vacuum," but the new rules will limit access for some patients.
     
    "There's not even a question that it's for the federal government to regulate. It is. The problem is that they're not. And meanwhile it's patients' rights that are at issue," she says.
     
    The city has blamed restrictive federal laws for Vancouver's rise in illegal marijuana dispensaries, up to 94 from fewer than 20 three years ago.
     
    Federal Health Minister Rona Ambrose says she is "deeply disappointed" by the city's decision and warned that storefront pot sales remain illegal in Canada.
     
    Canada's top court ruled earlier this month that medical marijuana patients have the right to consume pot in edible products like cookies, brownies and teas.
     
    The city says it's banning the treats because they appeal to children and it's difficult to control their contents. Patients will still be able to buy oils, tinctures and capsules to make their own food.
     
    But Vonn says this amounts to "second-class citizenship" for medical marijuana patients.
     
    "Nobody asks you to go home and make your own Advil," she says.
     
    "The IKEA model of 'You can assemble these parts at home' is not even feasible for all kinds of patients: those in long-term care, those in hospitals, those in single-room occupancy hotels without access to kitchens."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Help Us Solve Mystery Involving Man In Critical Condition: Vancouver Police

    Help Us Solve Mystery Involving Man In Critical Condition: Vancouver Police
    Police say that around 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, a 58-year-old man watched a hockey game at home and then went to the Kitsilano Beach area.

    Help Us Solve Mystery Involving Man In Critical Condition: Vancouver Police

    Vancouver-Based Special Effects Artist, Katie Chappell, Killed By Lion In South Africa

    Vancouver-Based Special Effects Artist, Katie Chappell, Killed By Lion In South Africa
    A woman who was killed by a lion in South Africa has been identified on social media as Kate Chappell, a 29-year-old visual effects editor who lived in Vancouver.

    Vancouver-Based Special Effects Artist, Katie Chappell, Killed By Lion In South Africa

    Toss Cases Of 375 Female RCMP Members Alleging Discrimination: B.C. Lawyer

    Toss Cases Of 375 Female RCMP Members Alleging Discrimination: B.C. Lawyer
    Mitchell Taylor is arguing the federal government is not directly liable for alleged harassment and bullying of former and current RCMP employees who are seeking to have a class-action lawsuit certified.

    Toss Cases Of 375 Female RCMP Members Alleging Discrimination: B.C. Lawyer

    Next Chapter In Case Of B.C. Couple Found Guilty Of Terror Holds New Challenges

    Simon Fraser University criminology professor David MacAlister says John Nuttall and Amanda Korody will have to convince a judge they wouldn't have carried out their bomb plot without police involvement.

    Next Chapter In Case Of B.C. Couple Found Guilty Of Terror Holds New Challenges

    Murder Charge Laid Against 21-Year-Old Man In Death Of Langley Homeless Man: Police

    Murder Charge Laid Against 21-Year-Old Man In Death Of Langley Homeless Man: Police
    LANGLEY, B.C. — Police say a 21-year-old man has been charged with murder after a homeless man was found dying on a sidewalk in Langley, B.C.

    Murder Charge Laid Against 21-Year-Old Man In Death Of Langley Homeless Man: Police

    B.C. Mountie Pretends He's Homeless To Catch Drivers On Cellphones

    B.C. Mountie Pretends He's Homeless To Catch Drivers On Cellphones
    A British Columbia Mountie who posed as a homeless man — sort of — says the tactic was an effective way to catch drivers using cellphones or not wearing their seatbelts.

    B.C. Mountie Pretends He's Homeless To Catch Drivers On Cellphones