Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Victoria The Latest B.C. City To Draft New Bylaws For Marijuana Dispensaries

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 May, 2015 01:43 PM
  • Victoria The Latest B.C. City To Draft New Bylaws For Marijuana Dispensaries
Victoria has become the latest British Columbia city to draft new bylaws for medical marijuana dispensaries, as Vancouver considers a plan to regulate illegal pot shops.
 
Council in the capital city has voted to ask staff to draft business licensing and zoning regulations, which could impose fees and new rules on security, record keeping and selling to minors.
 
Mayor Lisa Helps says she is especially concerned about the unregulated sale of marijuana to youth, who she says can suffer from early-onset schizophrenia and psychosis.
 
Helps says she is frustrated that municipalities are being forced to make drug policies after the federal government's restrictive medical marijuana laws created a "grey area" for police and cities.
 
Coun. Ben Isitt says staff are expected to take several months to draft the regulations before the public will have an opportunity to weigh in during a town hall.
 
Isitt says he expects the regulations to be similar to those proposed in Vancouver, where city council is considering a $30,000 licensing fee and strict rules about where stores can be located.

MORE National ARTICLES

Internal Senate Report On Residency Surfaces At Duffy Trial But No Details

Internal Senate Report On Residency Surfaces At Duffy Trial But No Details
OTTAWA — Mike Duffy's lawyer is considering whether to fight for the release of a politically sensitive audit that the Senate wants kept under wraps.

Internal Senate Report On Residency Surfaces At Duffy Trial But No Details

Auditor Takes Aim At First Nations Health, Prisoners And Tax-Credit Oversight

Auditor Takes Aim At First Nations Health, Prisoners And Tax-Credit Oversight
Canada's auditor general is taking issue with the quality of health care in remote First Nations communities, lacklustre efforts to rehabilitate prisoners and the dearth of oversight governing boutique tax credits

Auditor Takes Aim At First Nations Health, Prisoners And Tax-Credit Oversight

Auditor Slams Feds For Not Properly Tracking Impact Of Tax Credits On Treasury

Canada's auditor general says parliamentarians and the public they represent have no idea precisely how many billions of dollars the federal treasury foregoes each year through election-friendly tax credits and giveaways.

Auditor Slams Feds For Not Properly Tracking Impact Of Tax Credits On Treasury

Friends-Of-Feathers Flock Together To Save Ducklings Imprisoned On Police Patio

Friends-Of-Feathers Flock Together To Save Ducklings Imprisoned On Police Patio
Vancouver's finest have hatched a plan to help 10 jail birds fly the coop from police headquarters, and everything turned out ducky in the end.

Friends-Of-Feathers Flock Together To Save Ducklings Imprisoned On Police Patio

Rebar Reboot? Tribunal Holds Inquiry Into Imposed Tariffs Hurting B.C. Builders

Rebar Reboot? Tribunal Holds Inquiry Into Imposed Tariffs Hurting B.C. Builders
The Canadian International Trade Tribunal imposed added duties and tariffs last year on rebar coming from China, North Korea and Turkey, saying the countries were dumping the product into Canada.

Rebar Reboot? Tribunal Holds Inquiry Into Imposed Tariffs Hurting B.C. Builders

Federal Pipeline Regulator Asks Public To Guide Emergency Plans For Oil Spills

Federal Pipeline Regulator Asks Public To Guide Emergency Plans For Oil Spills
VANCOUVER — The chairman of the National Energy Board says the regulator has been "too conservative" in demanding information from oil pipeline companies and is moving to bolster disaster cleanup plan requirements.

Federal Pipeline Regulator Asks Public To Guide Emergency Plans For Oil Spills