Pubdate: Sat, 12 Apr 2014 Source: Nanaimo Daily News (CN BC) Page: A3 Copyright: 2014 Nanaimo Daily News Contact: http://www.canada.com/nanaimodailynews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1608 Author: Spencer Anderson COUNCILLORS TO DEBATE HOT TOPICS Delegates From Dozens Of Municipalities Meet On Weekend To Talk Medicinal Pot, Animal Trapping, Etc. Representatives from the City of Nanaimo are headed to Parksville and Qualicum Beach this weekend to debate a handful of hot topics with other coastal communities. Delegates from dozens of cities, towns, districts and villages will take part in the Association of Vancouver island and Coastal Communities 2014 conference, and will debate a number of resolutions requesting action on the part of the province. Among the list will be a resolution from Nanaimo calling on the province to remove medical marijuana production as a "farm use" for tax assessment purposes. The resolution also asks the government to grant municipalities the power to regulate the production of medicinal pot within the agricultural land reserve through land use provisions in the local government act. The topic of medical marijuana has recently seized the attention of municipalities due to changing regulations at the federal level. Health Canada now issues licences to large, commercial growers to produce medical marijuana, and is working to phase out older rules that allow individuals to grow their own or others' pot, so long as they have a proper licence. Municipalities want more control over how these facilities are planned on ALR lands. In the case of Nanaimo, the city wants to ensure that marijuana producers are not assessed the same way as farm land, which results in lower taxation than industrial or light industrial properties. The city faced this very issue last year, when a proponent put forward a rezoning request on industrial land in Duke Point. City hall was worried that once a facility was up and running, the owners could apply to have the property assessed as farm land. The proponent, Lafitte Ventures, signed a covenant restricting land use at the site to marijuana production. However, the city wants the province to address the issue. Other resolutions proposed by Nanaimo include a resolution calling on the province to speed up approval local bylaws on animal trapping. Nanaimo and other municipalities like Surrey, Sechelt and Vernon are awaiting a response from the government to bylaws that would regulate the use of body or leg-hold traps to catch animals in those jurisdictions. Nanaimo council has already voted to cease the use of live-trapping to manage beavers and other wildlife. A third resolution put forward by Nanaimo also calls for tougher penalties for council or regional board members who reveals confidential information from in-camera meetings, including disqualification from office and prosecution under the Offence Act. The conference goes on until Sunday. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D