Pubdate: Fri, 12 Jul 2013 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2013 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Gemma Karstens-Smith MEDICAL POT SHOP REQUIRES MD'S NOTE Store Still Operating Outside Law, Ministry Says Ottawa's first medical marijuana shop has made a big policy change within its first few weeks of operation, but Health Canada says the shop is still existing outside of the law. The Greater Ottawa Health Advocacy Centre now requires clients to have a form filled out by a health care provider before they can buy marijuana. The form includes information such as the health care practitioner's licence number, the amount of marijuana to be used by the patient per day and the length of time the patient is to use it. The shop, which opened July 2, originally allowed people to buy marijuana without a note from their doctor, but the practice soon came under scrutiny. Health Canada requires people looking to use medical marijuana to apply for a ministry-issued Authorization to Possess card or have a declaration signed by their physician. In June, Health Canada began its transition from a system of allowing users to grow their own marijuana to licensing producers to grow and sell. The switch will take until March 2014 to complete. Ryan Levis, owner of The Greater Ottawa Health Advocacy Centre, said he has applied for a Health Canada licence (none have been approved yet, according to the Health Canada website) and in the meantime is selling marijuana through the "compassion" system of pooling several approved medical marijuana users' supplies. The shop is run as a non-profit. But Jeannine Ritchot, director of medical marijuana regulatory reform for Health Canada, said shops such as The Greater Ottawa Health Advocacy Centre won't be eligible for a licence under the new legislation. "They are illegal and they exist outside the regulatory framework," she said. "We will continue to work with our partners in law enforcement whenever instances such as this one arise." Under the new act, users will no longer be allowed to grow their own marijuana, but they also won't be able to buy it from stores, Ritchot said. Instead, producers will mail out marijuana in the same way that Health Canada currently mails out the medical marijuana it grows. Under the new act, patients will no longer need to apply for an Authorization to Posses card. Instead, they will get a note similar to a prescription from their health care provider. The move streamlines the process, Ritchot said. The Greater Ottawa Health Advocacy Centre's model was inspired by a shop in British Columbia, Levis said. But the decision to open sales at the Ottawa shop to anyone who walked through the door caused tension between Levis and the B.C. organization. Levis told the Citizen Wednesday that the organization's representatives told him he was free to run the non-profit as he pleased, but severed its ties. On Thursday, Levis said he was leaving Ottawa "for additional training" in several different locations. The training, he said, will include learning French and getting recertification for his certificate in restorative justice. Colleagues will continue to operate the Somerset Street store. Levis will remain the store's owner and plans to come back to the city to continue his education work on health awareness. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom