Pubdate: Fri, 19 Sep 2014 Source: Sentinel Review (CN ON) Copyright: 2014 Woodstock Sentinel Review Contact: http://www.woodstocksentinelreview.com/letters Website: http://www.woodstocksentinelreview.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2385 Author: Tara Bowie Page: A1 COUNCIL OKS ZONE CHANGE FOR MEDICAL POT 'PLANT' Decision Makes Medical Marijuana Grow Operation a Permitted Use There was little buzz around the horseshoe at Woodstock city council Thursday night as councillors heard the details of a zone change that would allow a medical marijuana growing facility to operate at the former Thomas Built bus factory site. Councillors asked no questions of proponent of Nik Van Haeren, president of Ontario Marijuana Growers (OMG), nor did they ask questions to Ron Versteegen, the city planner. Van Haeren's request was simple - to rezone the property on Tecumseh Street from Transitional Industrial Zone (M4) to Special Transitional Industrial Zone (M4-special) to add a pharmaceutical and drug product industry to the permitted use. "We feel with this particular applicant there is no greater impact and it will fit in with surrounding uses," Versteegen said to councillors during his report. Council voted unanimously in favour of supporting the zone change application. It's anticipated the cost to renovate the existing building, which is 11,148 square metres (120,000 square feet), will be about $2 million. When fully operational, it's expected up to 150 people would be employed in the facility. Van Haeren's purchase of the property, which the city vested for non-payment of back taxes, was contingent to receiving a zone change. "I'm very happy with the decision," Van Haeren said following the meeting. "We can now clean up an old building and make it into something that will employ people." The next and greater obstacle ahead for the project is to receive Health Canada approval. Van Haeren said about 1,000 applications have been received by Health Canada to build facilities to grow medical marijuana. He plans to file his application, an 800-page document that focuses heavily on security measures the owner will undertake and quality assurance. "They need to know that we are going to be able to produce the same product quality marijuana on a continuous basis. This is a prescription so they need to know it's going to be the same every time," he said. Van Haeren expects to hear within the next nine to 12 months if the facility has been approved. If he doesn't receive Health Canada approval, he still plans to convert the building into something but isn't sure what at this time. "We will do something with it. It's a great building, or it will be. I'm fairly optimistic. We'll wait and see what happens," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom