Pubdate: Wed, 24 Apr 2013 Source: Kamloops Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2013 Kamloops Daily News Contact: http://www.kamloopsnews.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/679 Author: Sylvie Paillard Page: 9 MEDICAL MARIJUANA Academy Helps Potential Growers Navigate Process Protesters called out a familiar refrain from a blue haze at Riverside Park last weekend, but never before have the words "legalize pot" been taken so seriously. About 100 marijuana advocates gathered for the annual 4:20 Freedom Fest on Sunday to demand the right to use weed recreationally. The possibility of legalization feels closer than ever in Canada after six states south of the border declared pot decriminalized last year. And an Angus Reid poll of 799 British Columbians last October showed 75 per cent felt it should be taxed and regulated rather than prohibited. The notion that B.C.'s billion-dollar industry could become legitimate has many dreaming of becoming ganjapreneurs. Some predict big things despite the medical marijuana industry's ongoing stigma, law enforcement pressures and criminal opportunism 15 years after becoming legal. "It's unfathomable the revenue it would generate," said Carl Anderson, a Kamloops marijuana advocate, "not just for the government but for the producers, the retailers, everyone across the board. "It's an excellent business opportunity. What I foresee is like the cigar industry where you have all different qualities. And I could see British Columbia being the equivalent of Cuba in the marijuana industry where you have the $1 cigar, the $100 cigar and everything in between." (Anderson is currently mounting a constitutional challenge to charges of possession of marijuana for purpose of trafficking after being arrested while working for the Kamloops compassion club during a RCMP raid in November 2011.) While plenty of locals want to see pot decriminalized, there's heavy debate over business models. As new federal legislation will soon prohibit home grown medical crops, some fear the involvement of large corporations. "Unscrupulous tobacco companies... keep you hooked on the brands - we fear this happening with our cannabis," said Al Bettz, 4:20 Freedom Fest organizer. "We also don't want the livelihoods of so many people in the business to go to those large corporations." Bettz said his vision of decriminalization looks the same as it is today, only with government involvement when it comes to taxation and quality control. "The current way it is usually done is simple enough - the grower sells it to a middleman and he sells it to the dealer," said Bettz. "We propose the government becomes the middleman." However it's never quite that simple, even for freedom fighters like Bettz. He added that both growers and dealers would have to go through a licensing program with health checks for growing conditions, "other types of checks" for dealers and regulations to ensure they don't sell to teenagers. A look at the medical marijuana industry shows how problematic the business of selling weed remains. "It is a new industry and there are a lot of problems that need to be resolved," said Kelowna's Don Schultz, founder of Greenline Academy, which helps potential medical marijuana growers navigate the Health Canada licensing process. Schultz makes it clear that he advocates only the proper, permitted use of marijuana as a medicine. Currently, patients with a prescription for marijuana are allowed to get their medicine from three places: grow it themselves, buy it from Health Canada or buy it from a designated grower, typically a home based operator with a limit on the number of plants. Those growers and legitimate offshoot businesses associated with the industry say they're beset by roadblocks from law enforcement to banks to government bureaucracy. Then there are the municipal officials, police and firefighters who complain of abuse of licenses and security threats linked to illegal activity. The problems associated with the industry has led to changes in the rules set out in Health Canada's Marihuana for Medical Purposes Regulations, which comes into force in April 2014. By April 1 next year, personal use and designated grower licensees will no longer be allowed to grow their own crop. They'll have to buy their medicine through a licensed commercial producer. However Schultz anticipates the federal government's new rules will be delayed until 2016 at the earliest because of lawsuits from personal medical marijuana growers. Many of the 28,115 Canadians currently authorized to use marijuana can't afford the anticipated price hike, and growing their own at home is the only option. A notice posted by Health Canada on the new regulations estimates the current $1.80-a-gram cost for marijuana will rise to $8.80 a gram when the program takes effect. The Harm Reduction Journal, in a 2012 assessment of Health Canada's medical marijuana program, found 61 per cent of Canadian medical-marijuana users have an income below $30,000. Although Schultz is confident that people will continue to be allowed to grow at home for years to come, police in Creston B.C. have already begun hindering the medical grower licensing process. Designated grower applicants require criminal record checks so Creston RCMP Staff Sgt. Bob Gollan decided to implement new rules for accessing criminal histories in anticipation of the new legislation. Applicants in Creston must now get a letter from their district stating they can operate commercially in their area, provide their last 10 addresses, prove ownership of the property or get permission from the property owner and provide RCMP a detailed security plan. "That's to get a criminal background check," he said. "It's something that we're looking at in our detachment because we're sort of unique in that the number of medical marijuana licenses that people are applying for in this area... has significantly increased in the last several months." Health Canada states that individuals are allowed to apply as designated growers until September this year and are allowed to grow at home until March 2014. However Gollan said he's dissuading people from going ahead with their medical marijuana applications. "I'm just telling them 'I could do a criminal record check but you're not going to get it approved because there's a transition year between April 1 of this year and March 31 of 2014 where all these small ones are supposed to be shutting down or transitioning into these larger commercial sites,'" he said. Gollan said his uppermost concern was the security of officers responding to homes where medical marijuana is being grown. He added that he's complying with legislation. "Under the act it says you have to have this stuff in place," he said. "I spoke to Don Schultz and... I got his training reference manual and everything that I'm asking is listed in his training manual." The RCMP federal media relations office did not respond to inquiries by press time. Schultz said the manual does not list Gollan's requirements for a criminal record check. In June 2011, media attention got West Kelowna RCMP to rescind its policy to withhold criminal record checks for individuals planning to use them for growing after Schultz blew the whistle. Schultz said he isn't surprised by the resistance. "You run into these people... who think they're protecting the community but really they're probably damaging it," said Schultz. "What they're doing is creating criminal activity because these people are going to grow underground." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom