Pubdate: Thu, 24 Apr 2014 Source: Sun Times, The (Owen Sound, CN ON) Page: Front Page Copyright: 2014 Owen Sound Sun Times Contact: http://www.owensoundsuntimes.com/letters Website: http://www.owensoundsuntimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1544 Author: Rob Gowan LEGAL POT WILL CREATE JOBS Municipality Sells Land In Business Park To Medical Marijuana Company A medical marijuana production company is setting up shop in Hanover. Hanover council passed a bylaw at a special meeting Tuesday night to sell 3.7 acres in the town's business park to Alternative Medical Solutions Inc., which plans to build a 45,000- to 50,000-square-foot facility to grow medical marijuana. Mayor Kathi Maskell said the company will bring new tax dollars and jobs to town. "We are looking at probably 40 full-time jobs to start and that is a good news story for any of us in southwestern Ontario," Maskell said Wednesday. "We are pleased it is coming, we are pleased about the jobs and we look forward to the plant moving forward." Maskell said the town and company have been negotiating the sale for a couple of weeks. The selling price was "market value" - $30,000 per acre. The company has first right of refusal on an additional 2.6 acres adjacent to the land being purchased. "This is a good company to work with," said Maskell. "They are very open and they have been easy to work with." Before March 31, Canadians who required medical marijuana were able to apply to receive the drug from Health Canada, produce it themselves or designate someone to cultivate it on their behalf through a special licence. As of April 1, the only way to access marijuana for medical purposes is through commercial, licensed producers. On its website Health Canada lists 13 licensed producers under the "marihuana for medical purposes regulations." Health Canada media relations officer Sara Lauer wrote in an e-mail Wednesday that Health Canada could not disclose information related to applications to produce medical marijuana for privacy reasons, but added Health Canada has not put a cap on the number of producers it will licence. Maskell said the land purchase was the last major step for Alternative Medical Solutions before construction of its facility starts. "They are getting very close to the end," said Maskell. "The director who was with us last night told us the instructions and the sort of hurdles they had to jump through are in a manual several inches thick. "This isn't something you decide in one week you are going to do. They have been working on this for a long, long time." Maskell, who declined to provide contact information for Alternative Medical Solutions, said the plant in Hanover will produce 15 strains of medical marijuana. Maskell said the process is highly regulated and the marijuana the company will grow should not be mistaken for the drug bought and sold on the street. "This is not the smoking pot kind of thing, this is medical marijuana which has been proven to alleviate pain and help in many, many different ailments," said Maskell, who listed end-of-life pain, serious chronic pain and back pain as some applications. Maskell said the facility will be extremely secure with 12-foot fences, no windows, very few doors and 100 cameras. There will be no visits to the facility, which is regulated by Health Canada. "We are comfortable because it is Health Canada," said Maskell. "We are comfortable because of all of the things that are in place to make it secure." Maskell said the company had originally approached the town looking for a building, but the town didn't have one. "We did inform them . . . that we do have good land for purchase in our new business park and maybe an option was to build new and that has been the route they are taking, which is good." Maskell said no zoning changes were needed for the company to establish the plant in the business park. "Their location is ideal and we are pleased to be working with them and having them there," said Maskell. Late last year a different company proposed to set up a medical marijuana growing operation in Hanover, but that proposal is now dead. Maskell said Hanover has been aggressive in its marketing to bring businesses to the community that will employ the people of the area and the new facility meets those requirements. She said the town had not been pursuing a medical marijuana facility specifically. "It just happens that this is another business," said Maskell. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D