Pubdate: Wed, 18 Mar 2015 Source: Prince George Citizen (CN BC) Copyright: 2015 Prince George Citizen Contact: http://www.princegeorgecitizen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/350 Author: Neil Godbout Page: 6 MEDICAL POT AN OPPORTUNITY Normally, amendments to the city's zoning bylaws are just passed with no debate or discussions by the time they make their way to the city council table. Any discussion needed has already happened, staff has given their input, mayor and councillors have had their questions answered, so it's on to the next thing. But you throw in some marijuana and things get stupid fast. Because the new rules were drafted to accommodate where medical marijuana grow operations approved by Health Canada could legally set up shop in city limits, it's a political issue, even though there is no such application yet before council. Monday's approval was for rules when or if such an application does come forward. Council, as with all similar applications, will have the discretion to reject any proposal, even if it meets all of the criteria, which currently states they can only be on Agricultural Land Reserve parcels larger than 15 hectares or on small properties in the BCR, Danson or Boundary Road industrial areas. With the zoning in place, now the real discussion can start and residents should demand to know where the mayor and council really stand on medical marijuana production facilities in city limits. Their position should be that not only is Prince George open for business to these kind of legal operations, Prince George plans to go out and work hard to attract them to this city. Working with Initiatives Prince George, the goal should be to make this city a Western Canadian hub for the production and distribution of medical marijuana. From a business standpoint, Prince George is the perfect location to become that hub. Land prices are dirt cheap compared to more urbanized locations while the city boasts enough transportation options to ship the product quickly, efficiently and securely to anywhere in Canada. There is a large, well-educated labor pool available, there is adequate public infrastructure and police and fire protection. There is even a university and a medical program here that could do groundbreaking research on finding new and creative ways to produce and prescribe marijuana to help people suffering from a variety of ailments. Prince George has the chance to be on the ground floor of a brand-new, potentially lucrative industry in Canada and can be seen as the municipality with the foresight and the confidence to seize that opportunity. In exchange, the city would receive good paying jobs, steady tax revenues and a further diversified economy, all from a sector whose primary goal is creating a product that reduces the pain and suffering of the sick. What, exactly, is not to like? How, in 2015, is the handwringing over reefer madness clouding our thinking on what is clearly an incredible prospect? With increased research and understanding, medical marijuana's use as a pharmaceutical is only going to increase in the years ahead, particularly as an alternative to other powerful medications that come with equally powerful but unwanted side effects. A century ago, two of the products the Bayer pharmaceutical company was marketing to people around the world was a pain relief pill called Aspirin and a non-addictive, over-the-counter cough suppressant they called Heroin. Both the brand names and the drugs persist today - one that has done great good and saved lives, the other having the opposite effect. But they were released to the public in an era when there was little or no input from doctors, no long-term testing before public release, no government oversight after release and no outlet for patients to seek redress for damage done by harmful drugs disguised as medicine. Medical marijuana has had to meet a standard that Bayer never had to with either Heroin or Aspirin. Health Canada has approved the use and production of medical marijuana and continues to oversee it, even while working under a Conservative government clearly suspicious of using a street drug for medical purposes. This isn't about legalizing pot for personal use or any of the side issues around recreational drugs. This is about medicine and producing a tried-and-true treatment for legal use to patients in need. If not Prince George, some other municipality will not let such a glorious opportunity pass them by. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom