Pubdate: Thu, 12 Mar 2015 Source: Oshawa This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2015 Oshawa This Week Contact: http://www.durhamregion.com/oshawa-on-news Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1767 Note: Please specify Oshawa This Week as source in LTE MARIJUANA EDUCATION HELPS IN BYLAW DISCUSSIONS In recent years the issue of marijuana has changed. Where once it was considered a prohibitive substance, an illegal drug, today its medicinal purposes are being praised as more and more Canadians are prescribed the drug to ease suffering. Health Canada estimates as many as 50,000 Canadians were permitted to use medical marijuana in 2014 for conditions such as chronic pain, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, arthritis, anxiety and people undergoing cancer treatment. Oshawa residents Ben Fudge and Marko Ivancicevic are among those 50,000 permitted users and addressed a medical marijuana working group to educate councillors on issues related to the drug. Together they outlined the history of medical marijuana in Canada and highlighted some of the issues that affect municipalities, including zoning for legal marijuana production facilities and the licensing of vapor lounges. Oshawa has received one proposal for marijuana production in an area with agricultural zoning and that prompted much discussion from councillors. Mr. Ivancicevic pointed out there is no consistency among municipalities with regard to zoning. In Leamington, a medical marijuana production facility operates under the agricultural greenhouse zone while Clarington slots it in as a processing plant under industrial zoning. It will be up to Oshawa council to determine how to formulate its own zoning bylaw. Councillor Nancy Diamond also raised concerns, including whether people should present proof of a Health Canada permit at a potential vapour lounge. She said it seemed illogical to license vapour lounges given that they could be the site of illegal activity if there is no way to test that visitors to the lounge have permits. However, due to privacy rights a municipality cannot ask for proof. All that's necessary is a prescription to use. "In all honesty no one needs to be privy to that information," Mr. Ivancicevic said. Eventually councillors will have to establish zoning bylaws dealing with medical marijuana so this working group was a good start at understanding the complexities of the issue. It gave all involved more information so they can use what they learned when dealing with Oshawa's future zoning bylaws. The federal government legalized these operations but it will be the City that's responsible for where they're located and the enforcement of them. Long gone are the days when marijuana was an issue dealt with only by the police and the courts. Today it's moved into the mainstream and the better our elected representatives understand it, the better able they will be at formulating bylaws governing its use. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom