Pubdate: Fri, 14 Jun 2013 Source: Windsor Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2013 The Windsor Star Contact: http://www.canada.com/windsorstar/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/501 Author: Ian Mulgrew Page: A8 INDOOR POT GARDENS On April Fool's Day next year, Ottawa is officially quitting the pot business and simultaneously uprooting thousands of home-grow operations across the country. After two years of consultation and review, the federal government announced an overhaul of the medical marijuana program on Monday. The details will be published June 19, but Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq is banning the indoor pot gardens that are the bane of police departments, fire marshals and municipalities. A marijuana mail-order system for the ailing will be established. "While the courts have said that there must be reasonable access to a legal source of marijuana for medical purposes, we believe that this must be done in a controlled fashion in order to protect public safety," Aglukkaq said. She maintained that the 12-year-old medical marijuana program had grown exponentially - from under 500 persons to more than 30,000. The unintended consequences of having so many Canadians exempt from the criminal law and allowing thousands to grow marijuana in their homes have proven too difficult to manage, Aglukkaq said. Under the new rules, municipal zoning laws must be respected, and marijuana may only be grown by strictly regulated licensed producers who will sell their product by mail. Her sympathies clearly lay with civic authorities rather than the sick - - Aglukkaq made the announcement from an Ottawa fire hall, not a health setting. Advocates for the illegal compassion clubs (who lobbied Ottawa for legitimacy during the consultation process), as well as home-growers and patients (upset about predicted cost increases), promised litigation. The new rules continue to prohibit the dispensaries which tolerate the illicit operations, to change their laissez-faire policies and shutter them. A lawyer who represents a coalition of people against the repeal of the current program, John Conroy said litigation is inevitable. "We'll seek a constitutional declaration that the new regulations are unconstitutional in that they fail to provide for personal production," he said. "We'll seek a restraining order or injunction to prevent the introduction of the no-growing prohibition, and we'll ask the court to give the government a year to fix the new regulations to rectify the problem. If that fails, we'll sue them for damages. All these folks spent considerable amounts of money setting up grows." Kirk Tousaw, a Vancouver Island lawyer and marijuana advocate, said it was unfortunate that Health Canada wanted to dispute patients' rights in court. Most people can produce marijuana for between $1 and $4 a gram, but it sells for between $8 and $10 a gram on the black market or in a compassion club. Legal pricing under the new regulations was predicted by Ottawa to be much higher. The marijuana movement's most recognized voice, Jodie Emery, wanted the government to recognize that the "clubs and dispensaries are doing invaluable work that should be applauded and authorized by Health Canada," not left in limbo. "The proposed plan of allowing many private businesses to provide marijuana to patients is a very good one, but the freedom of choice for access shouldn't be restricted or monopolized," she explained. "Growing their own cannabis and accessing it from dispensaries should still be options available for patients." The old rules will apply until March 31, 2014. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt