Pubdate: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 Source: Niagara Falls Review, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2014 Niagara Falls Review Contact: http://www.niagarafallsreview.ca/letters Website: http://www.niagarafallsreview.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2907 Author: Ray Spiteri Page: A1 FORMER FACTORIES COULD BECOME MEDICAL MARIJUANA GROW-OPS From sugar to pot? If may take a while, but the process has begun for medical marijuana grow operations to start sprouting up in Niagara Falls. The city's committee of adjustment approved two zoning variances for the former Redpath Sugar plant on Garner Rd. and the former Kimberly Clark factory on Victoria Ave. The owners of both buildings applied to the committee so that a "nurser y for trees, plants and shrubs" could be added to the list of permitted uses on those properties. The city posted advance notices about the public meeting that took place Tuesday, but the notices did not specifically mention marijuana. Those opposed to the approvals have 20 days from the committee decision to file an appeal with the Ontario Municipal Board, which handles planning disputes. City clerk Dean Iorfida said it's up to the federal government whether to approve a legal grow operation, not the municipality. Applicants must seek a federal licence and let the municipality know about their application to Health Canada. The notification is circulated to various departments and the applicant is provided comments and any municipal requirements, such as building permits, are outlined. City council approved a staff report in 2013 around the time the federal government introduced changes to medical marijuana regulations. The report recommended council asking the federal government not to issue medical marijuana licences until it has received feedback from the affected municipality. Council felt that would ensure applications would comply with city bylaws. Iorfida said the city has been notified of six applications to Health Canada. He said the Redpath proposal is not one of the six notifications he received. "Not a single local application has been approved by Health Canada. In fact, very few have been approved throughout the country," he wrote in an email to councillors this week. Iorfida said one of the applicants, who the clerk described as a "very credible farmer," told him the federal process is "very intensive," requiring thorough plans and criminal checks. "To become a licensed producer, an applicant must meet all requirements of the new Marihuana for Medical Purposes Regulations including, but not limited to, obtaining the proper personal security clearances, meeting the physical security requirements for the cultivation and storage areas including security measures, and submitting a completed licensed producer application," he wrote in the 2013 report. The planting, cultivation and harvesting of marijuana is considered to be a crop and allowed wherever crops can be grown, Alex Herlovich, the city's director of planning, building and development, wrote in an email to councillors this week. First and foremost are agriculturally zoned areas. Crops can be grown in greenhouses and plant nurseries. A "nursery for trees, plants and shrubs" are also allowed in "prestige" and "light" industrial zones, as the definition of nursery is broad enough to encompass a legal grow operation. The former Redpath property and some CN lands behind the Via Station fall "somewhere between" light industrial and general industrial, said Herlovich. Iorfida said he assumes that's why the proponents may have needed approval of the committee of adjustment to add the nursery use. "I assume the proponents in the case may have wanted to be zoning-compliant prior to submitting their application to Health Canada, which is actually good due diligence, as opposed to notifying the municipality of their application and not inquiring on zoning," said Iorfida. Herlovich said the owners of the two sites still have to apply for a federal licence. "There is no forgone conclusion that these sites will be used for medical marijuana operations," he said, adding the federal licence application has to be reviewed and approved for operation. "There are no guarantees such a licence will be issued." Of the six notifications the city has received, about half were agricultural, said Iorfida. He said those agricultural proposals don't have to go before the committee or council, however, none of them have been approved by the feds and some of those applications are more than a year old. Properties associated with other notifications were at industrial locations. Those proponents were advised they would have to go through a committee of adjustment amendment to add the use. None of them made further applications, said Iorfida. "Council should be opposing an application based on planning merits not the type of crop that is being legally produced," said Iorfida. "If what is being grown is lawful, i.e. with a federal licence, city staff cannot distinguish between what is being grown. "Council should also be reminded that any grow-op approved by the feds will be a production and mail-order business only." That means licensed users can't buy on site and operations would be "strictly" indoors. "Based on past experience, federal approval is still a long-shot, in my opinion, and if the proponents do get approval it would likely not be apparent to the residents whether the site was producing sugar or medicinal marihuana." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt