Pubdate: Tue, 07 Sep 2004 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) a-4dee-b237-58c0f5bf6b39 Copyright: 2004 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Chris Johnson, Vancouver Sun Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?224 (Cannabis and Driving) OUR POT SHOPS ARE A BUDDING, BOOMING, BRISK BUSINESS For better or worse, the retail sector of Vancouver's marijuana industry is growing. What began as a couple of shops on Hastings Street last year has expanded to at least four shops on Commercial Drive that profit in the legal limbo left by police and city council, who won't meet to discuss the issue until later this month. At Hastings and Cambie, staff at the B.C. Marijuana Party bookstore, which openly sells seeds but not smokable stuff, told American tourists Monday to go to Commercial Drive to buy over-the-counter B.C. bud. "People come here all the time asking, 'Where can we get some weed?' " says Kaara Heywood, who describes herself as one of BCMP's 30 paid employees. "We've been sending people to Commercial Drive constantly. [The shops] are new on The Drive. But the culture has always been there. It's just becoming more storefront, less underground, more in-your-face." On Commercial, The Spirit Within shop temporarily closed Monday, the day The Vancouver Sun reported it was openly selling pot across the street from the now-famous Da Kine retail marijuana outlet. But customers, including some who appeared to be under 19, were rolling into Da Kine Monday afternoon. Many customers buy $10-a-gram marijuana at Da Kine, and then inhale it for free at Melting Point, which openly peddles drug-related products such as $800 "volcanos," used for inhaling through a bag, and $600 "bubble bags" used for refining hashish. "I got flow," boasts proprietor Marc Richardson, claiming he's paying enough taxes to fund the salaries of four police officers. He says he left the hemp-growing business in Manitoba to procure marijuana for the Compassion Club on Commercial before opening Melting Point, "Canada's only inhalation station," a year and a half ago. Since then, he claims, he's sold about $100,000 worth of volcanos. "This business is liquid cash all the time. There's no depression, no downturn." Richardson estimates that Da Kine, meanwhile, is making $100,000 a month, and generating another $100,000 for about 50 nearby stores and food joints. Heywood says shop owners are "a huge family organization" hoping to expand their businesses -- and consciousness -- to free-spirited neighbourhoods in the West End, Yaletown, Kitsilano and throughout the city, which some American tourists call "Vansterdam, British Colombia." "If Da Kine is allowed to stay, then of course other businesses will have their own storefronts," says Heywood. "It will start a domino effect." But some residents around Commercial Drive complain that "Vansterdam tourists" from the suburbs are parking in their spots, driving while impaired and threatening the safety of their children. "We have a whole lot of high people with car keys in their hands," says Eileen Mosca, a mural painter and president of the Grandview Woodland Community Policing Centre. "Their only parking is on our streets." She suspects pot businesses are moving away from Hastings, which is "a tad too seedy," to more upmarket Commercial. "They want to make this a mainstream business, so they're moving it." Mosca says she's not on an anti-marijuana crusade, but against governance by "nudge, nudge, wink, wink." "The level of naivete among city officials is just incredible. Our city government has decided that the laws of Canada don't apply to the Republic of Vancouver." She says potential drug businesses should at least have to get the consent of neighbourhood residents and business owners before they open their doors. "It's very hard to get a cold beer and wine store in Vancouver," she says, pointing to Avanti Pub's unsuccessful bid to open an off-sales store on Commercial Drive after residents and shop owners complained. "It appears that anyone can open a marijuana retail [outlet] in the city without residents having anything to say about it." She says the media attention around Da Kine is "the most brilliant for-free advertising gimmick a business could do." But Richardson says the pot shops are a bonus to the Drive. "We're not an organized syndicate that needs to launder funds. Just check my income-tax statements." Pointing to displays of artistic glass bongs priced up to $2,625, he says he's comforted to see passing police cars. "They're protecting my investments." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D