Pubdate: Sat, 22 Mar 2014 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2014 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Kelly Sinoski (with file from Canadian Press) Page: A10 FIRE SAFETY FEARS AS POT USERS WIN COURT RULING Temporary injunction means licensed patients can continue to grow their own supply Several B. C. municipalities say a last-minute victory for licensed medical marijuana users allowing them to keep growing the plants in their own homes will hamstring efforts to keep their cities safe. Surrey, Delta, Port Coquitlam and Maple Ridge were set to crack down next month on local medical marijuana patients who refuse to stop home production and destroy their plants, as required by Health Canada regulations slated to come into effect on April 1. The rules require medical marijuana patients to buy their pot from large-scale commercial facilities instead of growing it themselves. But they are now in limbo after a Federal Court judge on Friday granted a temporary injunction to a group of patients who are suing Ottawa because they are concerned about cost and quality of a commercially grown product. Judge Michael Manson ruled that licensed patients can keep growing their own medical marijuana in their homes while their challenge goes to trial. The judge also concluded some patients will not be able to afford marijuana if prices increase as expected. "I'm pleased ( the court) saw it our way," said Abbotsford lawyer John Conroy. "They saw that the patients would suffer irreparable harm if they didn't get the injunction. They can continue producing for themselves and control the quality." Under the terms of the injunction, patients who were licensed to grow marijuana as of Sept. 30 of last year can continue to do so, as well as anyone approved since that date. Patients will be restricted to possessing 150 grams of dried marijuana, which is the limit set by the new regulations, the decision stated. Conroy said it is not clear how the ruling affects new patients who need medical marijuana but aren't already approved. They may be forced to turn to the new commercial market, he said. Health Canada said it will review the decision in detail and consider its options, noting it is "committed to the implementation of the Marijuana for Medical Purposes Regulations in order to provide Canadians reasonable access to dried marijuana for medical purposes, while protecting public safety." The federal government noted there were fewer than 100 people authorized to possess marijuana for medical purposes when the program was introduced in 2001. That number has since grown to close to 40,000, posing "significant unintended consequences on public health, safety and security," including risks of home invasion, fire and toxic mould. Such a mantra is repeatedly parroted by municipalities across B. C., which also complain they have no idea where medical marijuana operations are located because Health Canada won't release a list of permit-holders, citing privacy concerns. The prevalence of medical marijuana grow operations in homes puts cities at risk, Surrey Fire Chief Len Garis said. In Delta, for instance, one home was found to have three licences and was growing 900 marijuana plants. Surrey has about 1,000 medical marijuana grow operations, while there are about 800 each in Mission and Maple Ridge. Not only are some of these homes rewired, or have unauthorized alterations, Garis said, but they are riddled with mould. "Hearing that this injunction has been approved is disappointing because it prolongs these places that are going to be further contaminated," he said. "Those places are not safe." Surrey firefighters know the locations of at least 300 medical marijuana grow operations, Garis said. Before Friday's ruling, the city had planned to send out inspectors and charge homeowners $ 5,200 if the plants were not destroyed. The fines would continue to rise every month, about $ 800 each time, until the grow operation was shut down. Port Coquitlam has a similar plan in place, while Maple Ridge, Delta and Richmond are hammering out their own plans as part of their crackdowns. "This is not just a simple homegrown problem," Delta Mayor Lois Jackson said. "These places are a concern to the neighbourhood." Neil Boyd, a criminologist at Simon Fraser University, said the court judgment is a significant rebuke of the government's policies around medical marijuana. "It's pretty clear that the way in which the government has gone about this has really very little to do with science or medicine," said Boyd. "The people who are growing to suit their own needs have very legitimate concerns about what expenses might be involved in this new system and what the different strains will be, and that doesn't seem to be a big part of what the government is encouraging." While the injunction application did not specifically target the new commercial licensing regime, the government argued that allowing some patients to continue growing their own pot would prevent the fledgling medical marijuana industry from fully developing. The Federal Court ruling acknowledges the injunction could affect the commercial market, but it says the impact will be short-lived and won't be major. Anton Mattadeen, chief strategic officer of MediJean, which already has a licence from Health Canada to grow marijuana for research and development purposes but is expecting a licence to distribute medical marijuana, said: "We have many interested patients who we will reach out to once our licence is granted." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt