Pubdate: Wed, 14 Jan 2004 Source: Advance, Barrie, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2004 Metroland Printing, Publishing and Distributing Contact: http://www.simcoe.com/sc/barrie/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2192 Author: Laurie Watt Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/molson+brewery MAYOR PUTS POSITIVE SPIN ON 'SUDS TO BUDS' STORY Barrie's A Great Place To Do Business - And Even The Less-Legitimate Types Realize It. After coming to terms with the shock of the size of the marijuana growing operation in the old Molson Brewery adjacent to Highway 400, Mayor Rob Hamilton, in a media interview, tried to cast a positive spin on the publicity that has generated one-liners such as "Come grow with us," "Barrie, a community in bloom," and "From suds to buds." "I was shocked that Molson left (in 2000) and we lost 400 jobs and a good corporate citizen. I'm shocked this operation was going on. Everyone's shocked at the size," Hamilton said, noting the city had the national media spotlight on it since the extensive hydroponic operation was uncovered early Saturday morning. "It's not what happened but how you react (that's important)," he said. "Even the bad guys realize Barrie is a great place to do business. "It has services galore - water, electricity, beside a major highway, 40 minutes north of the heart of the Greater Toronto Area, close to Pearson airport. That plant is capable of employing people and is begging for someone to put it to a legitimate use. The publicity is fabulous. The welcome mat for legitimate business is out." Molson left town in 2000, and the plant was sold in October, 2001 to Toronto-based Fercan Developments for $8 million. At 187,000 square feet, the old brewery sits on almost 36 acres, severed from an 85-acre parcel that was the old Molson Park. The building has been mostly full for the better part of the last year, with tenants that include National Roasters coffee, a water-bottling operation and a transport company. Some office space remains vacant. Fercan's lawyer appealed to council in November 2002 for a tax reduction, because he believed the assessment was excessive and based on the larger parcel that included the old Molson Park, but council denied the request. Hamilton added Saturday's bust shows local police are among the most effective - and legitimate businesses can rest assured Barrie's a great place to be. "They came up here, broke the law and they got caught," he said. "We have other buildings in Barrie for sale and that would be great locations for someone to do business." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin