Pubdate: Fri, 21 Dec 2012
Source: Victoria News (CN BC)
Copyright: 2012 Black Press
Contact: http://www.vicnews.com/contact_us/
Website: http://www.vicnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1267
Author: Daniel Palmer
Note: with files from Kevin Diakiw, Black Press

MEDICAL POT HOME GROW-OPS TO END

Prescription-Use Marijuana To Be Produced Commercially

The federal government is poised to eliminate licensed medical
marijuana grow-ops in homes, recognizing long-standing safety concerns
and connections to the illegal drug trade.

Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq announced this week Health Canada is
getting out of the growing business and will phase in a new system of
strictly regulated commercial producers.

"We have heard real concerns from law enforcement, fire officials and
municipalities about how people are hiding behind these rules to
conduct illegal activity, and putting the health and safety of
Canadians at risk,"Aglukkaq said in a statement. "These changes will
make it far more difficult for people to game the system."

Medical marijuana growers have operated for years without needing
municipal government or police approval and are not subject to health,
fire, building or plumbing inspections.

The Fire Chiefs Association of B.C. said marijuana grow-ops, both
legal and illegal, are 24 times more likely to catch fire than the
average home.

"I can tell you from my experience, when you walk into a legal
(grow-op) versus an illegal one, there isn't a lot of difference in
the safety hazards," said Victoria Fire Chief Jeff Lambert.

He echoed a statement from the provincial chiefs that they are not
passing judgment on marijuana use. "It's not about prohibiting
marijuana from those who need it."

While he admits large-scale grow-ops aren't rampant within Victoria's
boundaries, Lambert said the federal changes will only benefit public
safety in the Capital Region.

"Everything's done in secrecy, so when our fire crews show up, they
don't know what they're walking into," he said. "It places the
firefighters at risk, and I think the occupants as well."

Medicinal marijuana users have ballooned from about 500 in 2002 to
nearly 26,000 today, according to Health Canada.

The new rules will also streamline medical marijuana prescriptions,
allowing family doctors to write prescriptions directly. Under
existing rules, patients had to be referred to a specialist, who then
had to submit multiple forms to Health Canada for approval.

The cost of medical pot is also expected to increase significantly, as
the $5/gram federal subsidization will come to an end.

Health Canada intends to implement the new system by March 31, 2014,
at which point all current possession or production licences for pot
will expire.

The Victoria Police Department refused comment, but said it supports a
statement from the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police, which
applauded the changes.

A 75-day comment public feedback process is now open
(www.bit.ly/U4xtqi) and will end on Feb. 28, 2013.

The details of the new regulations are available on the ministry's
website (www.bit.ly/SFDUlX).

- - with files from Kevin Diakiw, Black Press 
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D