Pubdate: Tue, 28 Oct 2008 Source: Langley Advance (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.langleyadvance.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1248 Author: Heather Colpitts HEMP STORE OWNER HAS 'LEAF' TO APPEAL Langley City turned down a business licence for a store selling items adorned with pot leaves. A 300-square-foot store downtown has sparked a fight between its owner and Langley City. Randy Caine applied to open a retail novelty and gift shop called Hempyz. The shop includes some bath and beauty items containing hemp derivatives, but the common theme of the store is the pot leaf that can be seen on the cards, T-shirts, rugs, jewelry, lighters and more. City Mayor Peter Fassbender said the business licence has been turned down because it contravenes the City bylaw on permitted uses. The two men have already butted heads over the shop. Caine is adamant that there is no drug paraphernalia, no rolling papers and no drugs in his store. He said he simply wants to sell novelty items with pot leaves on them. "I just want to have a little store and have a little fun," he said. He phoned City hall on Oct. 21 to check on the status of his business licence and was told it was approved pending a fire inspection which was done Thursday. That was done as scheduled, with one caveat - Caine would be re-inspected Nov. 4 to ensure he had put up a required light by the door. So he planned a soft opening Friday. But Caine said Mayor Peter Fassbender visited the day before, and advised him such a shop would never be allowed in the City. Regardless, Caine said, "I told him I was going to open my business." Armed with copies of legal verdicts he considered relevant, Caine appeared at City hall Friday morning, vowing to take legal action against the City if it tried to prevent him from operating a "legal business." "I will not be bullied," Caine told the Langley Advance. He opened his doors that afternoon. It's not the first time a municipality has gone after Caine. He ran the Joint Coffeehouse and Emporium in Surrey for 15 months. The municipality fought him and forced him into bankruptcy at a time when he had a young family. In the 1990s, Caine launched and lost a Charter of Rights challenge to laws governing simple drug possession. Caine, who freely admits to using pot himself, was raised on a farm at 192nd Street. He has lived in Langley for the past 15 years and in Langley City for eight years. He's worked in heavy construction and is married for 32 years. The 54-year-old father of two grown kids said this is a freedom of speech issue. It's also an issue of money. He's paid $189 along with his business licence application, and has thousands of dollars tied up in the new venture. Between rent, utilities, licensing, and stock, it's cost him about $25,000 to get the doors open. He said he's locked into a two-year lease and a three-year alarm contract. His commitments add up to about $70,000. Fassbender said City staff brought the application to his attention Thursday. While out on an errand, he passed the shop and stopped to have a look, invited inside by the owner, who said he was going to open Friday. "I said I don't think you should open without a business licence," the mayor told the Langley Advance. He told Caine he is the mayor, and that administration had just brought the issue and the zoning contravention to his attention. Fassbender said he also offered up his personal opinion, and not that of the City or others on council. "From a personal point of view, I do not want to see this kind of business in our downtown core," Fassbender said. The mayor said council hasn't dealt with the issue because it just happened late last week. He added that Caine has leave to appeal to council if he disagrees with the decision. "The City has the right to refuse a business licence if it's in contravention based on use," he said. Fassbender added the business licence application fee has been refunded. The area is zoned C1 downtown commercial, which does not permit hemp shops, a category under the City zoning. Any shop that sells any hemp item can only set up in a C3 zone. The only C3 specific commercial zoning within City limits is Willowbrook Shopping Centre. If a business operates without the licence, it's a $100 fine each time it opens its doors. Caine said he can't understand the mayor's strong reaction against novelty items. "It's like Reefer Madness without the reefer," he said. Fassbender is unapologetic for his anti-drug stance. "I stand on record as being opposed to us desensitizing our community to drugs." He said he disagrees with anything that portrays drugs to people and particularly kids to drugs, as harmless. Fassbender is opposed to pot decriminalization. He's not among the contingent that consider pot a harmless drug, noting he has to deal with calls every day about the impacts of drugs in this community. He added that people may want to question the civic election candidates about their drug views. Caine went to the media Friday about his fight with the City. Fassbender was then interviewed on CKNW radio, and since then has heard from the pro-pot lobby. "I'm now receiving emails from Toronto and all over the country telling me what a Neaderthal I am," the mayor said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake