Pubdate: Sat, 23 Aug 2014 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2014 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/wEtbT4yU Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Brian Hutchinson Page: A5 POT'S NEW PUSHERS Former police, mayors and senior government politicians are jumping on the weed wagon to promote and advise start-ups Seeking to profit from Canada's new medical marijuana regulations - which put the production and sale of high-grade weed into the hands of corporations and penny-stock outfits - promoters are turning to former police chiefs and prominent politicians to help sell their products and attract mom and pop investors. But he was just named advisor to Vodis Innovative Pharmaceuticals Inc., a Vancouver-based, publicly traded company that hopes to obtain a Health Canada licence to sell high-quality marijuana to medical patient s. Joining him on the Vodis advisory board is Senator Larry Campbell, a former Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer and Vancouver mayor. As with all things marijuana, British Columbia is a hotbed of penny-stock pot promotion. The two men may disagree on marijuana reform - Mr. Campbell wholeheartedly endorses legalization, while Mr. Reynolds is more cautious - but they have similar roles as corporate cannabis advisors. They believe they can help Vodis organize its affairs and compete with other marijuana start-ups and established companies. The company's young executives might know plenty about growing potent bud, but they "don't know s-t from shinola about business," says Mr. Campbell. That's why he signed on, he adds: To help them with corporate regulations, audits and security matters. In exchange for his counsel, he received purchase options on about 250,000 Vodis shares. For his part, Mr. Reynolds thinks he can help Vodis with disclosure requirements and public outreach, such as engaging with the communities where the company hopes to grow its marijuana. But he insists he won't lobby. "I don't make calls to government," he says. "I'm just being an advisor. I do that for a lot of companies. If they are willing to pay what I charge, I'll do it." Vodis is just one of many upstarts in the medical marijuana business, which is still in its infancy in Canada, but expected to grow by leaps and bounds, thanks to the country's new Marijuana for Medical Purposes Regulations (MMPR), introduced in April. The new regulatory regime is meant to divert medical marijuana production from thousands of independent home grows and black-market operations to secure, inspected facilities run by law-abiding companies. To date, Health Canada has granted MMPR production licences to 22 operations, from Moncton, N.B., to Vancouver Island. For arcane privacy-related reasons that even Health Canada spokesmen cannot decipher, only 13 licencee holders have been publicly identified; of those, just a handful are now producing and selling marijuana to customer s. Others are waiting for federal bureaucrats to inspect and approve their products. Dozens more companies are waiting for their MMPR applications to be reviewed. Health Canada has already predicted the number of Canadians authorized to possess marijuana for medical use will increase almost tenfold in the next decade, to about 309,000, as more evidence about the drug's efficacy emerges and more doctors become willing to prescribe it to patients. It estimates by 2024, the "legal marijuana supply industry" may be worth $1.3-billion. "It's going to be like when they found [different uses for] Aspirin," says Mr. Campbell, from his home on Galiano Island, one of B.C.'s Gulf Islands. "It's going to be unbelievable." Mike Harcourt , a former B.C. premier, jumped into the competitive fray this year, becoming chairman of Vernon, B.C.-based True Leaf Medicine Inc., yet another putative marijuana provider. True Leaf hopes to go public and list shares on a stock exchange soon, he says. He explains he was at first reluctant to get involved with the company, but after doing "a lot of reading," his "thinking kind of evolved." In May, he agreed to join True Leaf's board. Despite enduring chronic pain and partial quadriplegia, from which he has suffered since a near-fatal fall off a cottage deck 12 years ago, Mr. Harcourt says he doesn't consume cannabis at all. Other public figures entering the medicinal weed business include: Kash Heed, a former West Vancouver police chief and B.C. solicitor general, who acts as a consultant for several hopeful marijuana producers; and Barry Daniel, a former Abbotsford police chief. Mr. Daniel describes himself as a law enforcement "traditionalist" who years ago would have scoffed at the idea of working with marijuana growers. "But over time, and watching things unfold =C2=85 I changed my mind," he says. "To be frank, I think [marijuana for recreational use] should be decriminalized." In his new incarnation, he will work as Wildflower's head of security. Like many other marijuana newcomers, the company is tapping public markets. William MacLean, its chief executive, helped execute a reverse takeover of a moribund resource-based company this year. As a result, Wildflower grabbed a spot on the Canadian Stock Exchange, where penny stocks are bought and sold. Mr. MacLean hopes to at - tract enough capital to build a 14,000-square-foot marijuana production facility near Nanaimo, on Vancouver Island. It's a very speculative play; at this point, the company does not even own an MMPR licence. Even if it were to receive federal approval to grow and sell pot, there's no guarantee Wildflower will make money for its investors. Best listen to Mr. Reynolds, the conservative politician turned marijuana advisor. Sinking money into a marijuana company "is gambling," he says. "Be very careful." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt