Pubdate: Sat, 26 Mar 2011 Source: Daily Courier, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2011 The Okanagan Valley Group of Newspapers Contact: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca/includes/email_forms/letters_to_editor.php Website: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/531 Author: Ron Seymour, The Okanagan Saturday KELOWNA COUNCIL TO DISCUSS CLINICAL GROW-OPS Violence and gang activity around the pot-growing business can only be eliminated by legalizing the drug, advocates for the medicinal use of marijuana say. Laws prohibiting marijuana's widespread production set the stage for criminals to control its cultivation and distribution, according to a Kelowna group that represents people who are permitted to smoke pot. "Prohibition is the largest and most harmful failed public policy in history," the Be Kind Okanagan Growers and Compassion Club say. "If we are truly concerned about the health and well-being of our citizens, if we want to protect them, then we should be willing to address the topic of legalization, because the costs of prohibition to all of us are astronomically high," the club says. On Monday, Kelowna city council will consider whether to join a call from other B.C. municipalities for the federal government to change the way marijuana is provided to those who have a medicinal and legal dispensation to use it. Currently, licence-holders can grow marijuana in their homes for their own use, and for one other licence-holder. But some civic politicians say this is a less-than-ideal system, since larger quantities may be produced for illegal sale to others, making the homes an attractive target for criminals. "We know, based on actual cases, that there is a significant misuse of many of the licences and the volume of product produced often exceeds an individual's personal requirement," the mayors of Langley and Chilliwack write in an open letter to all their provincial counterparts. "The size of the grows and number of plants is out of control and can result in potential home invasions, and other related criminal activity," the mayors say. To deal with the situation, the mayors suggest Ottawa should cancel all existing medicinal marijuana licences. In the future, they say, people who have legal permission to smoke pot should have to obtain government-produced quantities of the drug through pharmacies. "As this is the practice for other controlled substances such as methadone, we do not see why this cannot be done for medicinal marijuana," the mayor say. Kelowna council originally considered the matter last Monday, but deferred making any decision until gathering more information. Be Kind has now submitted a four-page letter to City Hall, strongly denouncing the idea of cancelling exist medicinal marijuana licences, and advocating instead for legalization of pot. The group says Health Canada once considered using pharmacies to distribute marijuana to medicinal users, but decided it would be impractical. And they say government-grown pot is of poor quality and usually snubbed by medicinal users. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.