Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver's huge 4-20 pot celebration to be replaced by virtual event

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Apr, 2020 05:39 AM
  • Vancouver's huge 4-20 pot celebration to be replaced by virtual event

VANCOUVER - What would have been Vancouver's 26th annual marijuana festival has been sidelined by the COVID-19 pandemic but organizers say a virtual celebration will go ahead.

The unsanctioned festival has attracted tens of thousands of enthusiastic pot users and vendors to previous events downtown and at a popular Vancouver beach, despite objections of local officials.

Physical distancing restrictions aimed at slowing the spread of COVID-19 have cancelled this year's festival, but organizer Dana Larsen says on social media that an online celebration will replace it.

The virtual event, described as a "social-distancing-friendly, home hotbox session" begins at 11:50 a.m. Pacific, which is 4:20 p.m. in Newfoundland, and continues through the afternoon.

Larsen's social media post says he will be giving away "a pound of cannabis" during the online gathering, while Vancouver police say they will be looking for any celebrants who decide to gather in groups.

Sgt. Aaron Roed says officers will be monitoring traditional 4-20 celebration locations, such as Sunset Beach and the plaza at the Vancouver Art Gallery, but he says police aren't aware of specific gatherings this year.

"Social distancing measures still apply, and for health and safety we are encouraging people to stay at home and to continue to practice the measures already in place," Roed says in an email statement.

Organizers of the annual marijuana smoke-in have never obtained a permit, while policing and repairs to grass fields have cost the city hundreds of thousands of dollars.

The 4-20 gathering takes its name from the month and day on which it is held, because the numbers coincide with 4:20 p.m., the time when the founding group of advocates would gather to share marijuana.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 20, 2020.

MORE National ARTICLES

COVID 19: Here Are The Measures CFIB Is Taking On Behalf Of Small Business In Canada And What Can Be Done By You And Your Employees To Prepare

- If the quarantine is driven by the employee (ie. they have no symptoms, have not traveled out of country, but do not wish to come to work); they will not be able to collect EI. You will use ROE Code N – Leave of Absence    

COVID 19: Here Are The Measures CFIB Is Taking On Behalf Of Small Business In Canada And What Can Be Done By You And Your Employees To Prepare

Multiculturalism Grants Advance Anti-Racism

Communities throughout B.C. will be safer and more inclusive for people, with 75 projects supported through the latest round of BC Multiculturalism Grants.

Multiculturalism Grants Advance Anti-Racism

'Saddened' - Calgary Stampede Temporarily Lays Off 80 Per Cent Of Workforce

CALGARY - The future of the 2020 'Greatest Show on Earth' is up in the air after the Calgary Exhibition and Stampede temporarily laid off 80 per cent of its staff Tuesday as a direct result of the COVID-19 pandemic.    

'Saddened' - Calgary Stampede Temporarily Lays Off 80 Per Cent Of Workforce

The Latest Developments On Covid-19 In Canada

Conservative MP Dan Albas says his party wants to make sure small businesses get as much help from the federal government as possible.

The Latest Developments On Covid-19 In Canada

Daughter Of Man At Care Home Hit By Covid-19 Says Loneliness Is A Big Issue

Daughter Of Man At Care Home Hit By Covid-19 Says Loneliness Is A Big Issue
VANCOUVER - A woman whose father suffers from dementia and lives at a B.C. care home where six people have died of COVID-19 says he is becoming increasingly lonely and anxious at the facility where few visitors are allowed.

Daughter Of Man At Care Home Hit By Covid-19 Says Loneliness Is A Big Issue

B.C. College Of Pharmacists Outlines It's Role In Halting Spread Of COVID-19

B.C. College Of Pharmacists Outlines It's Role In Halting Spread Of COVID-19
VANCOUVER - Pharmacists in British Columbia are now able to provide medication refills to patients without an updated prescription from a doctor or nurse practitioner.    

B.C. College Of Pharmacists Outlines It's Role In Halting Spread Of COVID-19