Pubdate: Mon, 30 Aug 2004 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Pete McMartin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/lasqueti+island LASQUETI EXPERIENCE PROVES B.C. GONE TO POT In this case, the police deserve as much sympathy as residents of the island. Maybe you have to be stoned to visualize it, but on a map, Lasqueti Island vaguely resembles a roach -- and by "roach" I am not speaking in the entomological sense. Similarly, its larger next-door neighbour, Texada Island, resembles a full-blown spliff. (Note: A "spliff" is generally regarded as a large doobie. A "doobie" is . . . oh, who are we kidding? You know what a doobie is.) I don't know much about the place, never having been there, but Lasqueti Island is remembered fondly in my wife's family mythology. They would summer there in the 1960s and 70s, and back then, Lasqueti epitomized that West Coast way of life peculiar to its time -- a tolerant, benignly hedonistic refuge. In an accounting of the place by my wife's Aunt Joy, there existed a commune of hippies (many of them American), a few fishermen, a few retirees, a few loggers, the odd draft dodger, a resident population of welfare bums (a category that probably overlapped upon most of the above-mentioned groups), and some cattle and sheep, half of them wild. There was also, Joy recalls, a lot of marijuana there. Way back then it could be seen growing in many places, she said, though oddly no one laid claim to it. I guess it was just self-seeding, huh? Now, 45 years later, according to RCMP, there is this recent startling development on Lasqueti to report: There is a lot of marijuana there. This revelation came to light last week in an RCMP media advisory. Usually, RCMP media advisories are as dry as dust, but in this one, one sentence leapt off the page. Pot was so common on the island that residents, it stated, "admit to using marijuana as a currency commodity instead of cash to conduct business transactions." The advisory also suggested that since the amounts being grown were so large that it was enough to keep each resident of Lasqueti stoned until the next Ice Age, much of it was being exported off-island. That smell wafting in from Lasqueti, the RCMP charged, was the stink of organized crime. The Lasqueti Islanders, in reaction, seemed to be as outraged at this charge as they were entertained. "Organized crime?" one Islander was quoted as scoffing in a Province story. "I'd say disorganized crime, maybe." Whatever. Who knows about these things? But the Islanders were livid, and they were tired of the heavy-handed way the force had been conducting its annual raids, with RCMP and military helicopters buzzing overhead. They demanded a meeting. The force dispatched a three-man flak-catching contingent headed up by Staff-Sgt. Bill Van Otterloo. On the phone, Van Otterloo sounds like a genuinely nice guy, a 35-year veteran who knows what's what, and who, despite the grind of his job, can't quite keep the humour out of his voice. I got the impression that he was aware of the ironies at hand. "There are about 350 permanent residents on Lasqueti," Van Otterloo said, "and about 150 attended the meeting. Of those, there were a total number of speakers of about 30. Of those, some of them wanted to debate the legalization of marijuana." "But," Van Otterloo sighed, as if he were throwing his hands up at a loss, "I'm not in the business of debating government policy. We don't make the laws. We just enforce them." Van Otterloo did not want to get into a debate with me over the legalization of marijuana, either, and it was unfair of me to try to engage him in one. But he did say that he remembers years ago that society underwent a debate on how to reduce the number of highway deaths due to alcohol. Society grew increasingly intolerant of drinking and driving, and the force cracked down. That same debate over marijuana may transpire, Van Otterloo suggested, as society's tolerance or intolerance of marijuana shifts. In the meantime, he's just a guy doing his job. The way he will do that job will likely change, at least on Lasqueti Island. The Islanders got an apology from the RCMP, and the annual practice of hunting by helicopter, Van Otterloo said, would "be looked into." His concern now, he said, was to "rebuild the bridges" to the community. Oddly, cast as they are as the ham-fisted zealots in this case, I find myself sympathizing with the cops. Even though they are, as Van Otterloo said, just doing their jobs, more and more of them must be increasingly wondering just what their job is. Here we are, 45 years since Aunt Joy first glimpsed pot growing on the island, and despite the annual helicopter flyovers and exorbitant costs devoted to eradicating it, there may be more pot on Lasqueti Island, not less. Here, too, in the big city the stuff is more ubiquitous than ever, and if you don't believe me, ask any high school student. This may be a case where policing is creating the "problem" (as the police see it) rather than containing it. By keeping its street cost inflated by trying to restrict its supply, we've created that much more incentive for suppliers to grow it. B.C. has gone to pot -- and maybe not despite the law, but because of it. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin