Pubdate: Fri, 14 May 2010 Source: Maple Ridge News (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Maple Ridge News Contact: http://www.mapleridgenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1328 Author: Claus Andrup Column: Radio Haney Note: Claus Andrup is a former member at large of the Maple Ridge Community Heritage Commission, the Maple Ridge Economic Advisory Commission, and former President of the Maple Ridge Historical Society. He has lived in Maple Ridge since 1994 LIKE IT OR NOT, MAPLE RIDGE HAS A REP Marijuana Ridge, it has a ring to it. In the words of John McEnroe: "You cannot be serious." Mention the name Maple Ridge and in certain cases - numerous cases - the listener will give you a knowing look. They know, or think they know, that you own a bad dog, a large truck, a gun, perhaps, and that you may possibly have connections to the Hells Angels - as in 'my mother married one,' or, 'My doctor rides a Harley.' Oh, and if you don't actually own your own grow op, there are at least half a dozen on your street. Maple Ridge, eh? Sweet. Like it or not, we have a rep, on the street. With this background, some of us, the RCMP, council and the community are getting their bongs in a twist over, God-forbid, a legal dope dispensary on 224th Street. You just know this is going to send the neighbourhood to Hades. South Haney, gateway to gentility and urban bliss, now under threat from a horde of prescription-bearing patients, sent by Health Canada and the Federal Department of Justice to ruin this quaint and tranquil village. Whatever next? Here's what may be next. California may be about to take a deep breath (read, inhale) and vote the wicked weed into legality. If the legalization of ganja were to happen, the implications for British Columbia could be interesting. For a start, could we compete in a market where it is illegal for us to grow, yet legal for our neighbour? California may vote on legalizing pot, by John Hoeffel (LA Times), March 23: "L.A. County petition signatures are expected to tilt the balance for putting an initiative on the November ballot. Governments' budget crises may help the measure's prospects, some say. "Fourteen years after California decided marijuana could be used as a medicine and ignited a national movement, the state is likely to vote on whether to take another step into the vanguard of drug liberalization: legalizing the controversial weed for fun and profit." The California referendum could deal a devastating blow to B.C.'s lucrative marijuana export industry. If it passes in November, individual growers in California will be able to cultivate up to 25 square feet of marijuana, while local governments would both regulate and tax the sale of cannabis. All this just as Marc Emery, the Prince of Pot and publisher of cannabisculture.com, heads south for a five-year term in the pen. B.C. marijuana is said to fetch (not that I'd know, you understand) $2,400 a pound in California. Chances are that if California legalizes the leaf it will fetch less than the paper it is rolled in. According to Emery, the homegrown market will evaporate if Canadian pot users flock to California for cheap, high-quality cannabis that could be available for a little as $10 per ounce, compared to the current rate of $200 in Vancouver. The B.C. marijuana industry is supposedly worth $5 billion to $8 billion and, if legalized, presents significant taxable revenue. HST, it would seem, is coming to a taxpayer near you just in time. Maybe then Maple Ridge, a noted battlefield for green activists versus the urban sprawl proponents, would have its day in the sun. The legalization of pot could open the door to the controversial Pelton land proposal swinging into gear - 200 acres of pot, legally grown, would mean jobs, no change to land use, happy customers and a delighted provincial government collecting HST on the sales of legally grown smoke. All that would remain would be to change our name to Marijuana Ridge. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom