Pubdate: Thu, 23 Apr 2015 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2015 Postmedia Network Contact: http://www.calgaryherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Jeff Lee Page: A15 Cited: http://www.scribd.com/doc/262756357/Pot-Proposal#scribd VANCOUVER PLOTS MEDICAL POT RULES Proposal would make city first in Canada to license dispensaries Up to now, there has been a lack of clear and transparent regulatory framework from the federal government. Vancouver is about to become the first city in Canada to regulate the business of selling marijuana. Even though the drug is technically available only to people with federally issued medical marijuana cards, the city will permit the operation of dispensaries under a proposed framework that rigidly sets out who can operate businesses and under what conditions. The plan, which will go to city council Tuesday, ignores the legality of marijuana and instead tries to deal with the astronomical growth of unlicensed dispensaries over the last few years. As of mid- April, city officials count more than 80 such shops, a fourfold increase since 2012, when the federal government changed the rules for how medical marijuana users obtain the drug. "The city has no jurisdiction to regulate the sale of marijuana, but it does have clear jurisdiction to regulate how and where businesses operate in our city," said a news release issued by city staff Wednesday. "Up to now, there has been a lack of clear and transparent regulatory framework from the federal government." Under staff's proposal, the city will levy a $ 30,000 annual administration fee. Business licences will also cost up to $ 5,000 per year, depending on square footage. And they will all have to re- apply annually. The city is also going to stringently limit where the shops can go; they can't be within 300 metres of schools, community centres and each other. And in an effort to rid certain neighbourhoods of established shops, the city is banning them from side streets. In the city's Downtown Eastside, where many of the shops are now located, they'll only be able to open along Hastings and Main streets. Coun. Kerry Jang said the city was forced into this decision because of what he called Ottawa's "prohibitionist approach." "It is because the federal medical marijuana laws are absolutely unworkable. Here is a case in which you had people who used to grow their own and do their own thing, and we had no complaints and only a few shops in Vancouver," Jang said. "All of the sudden we're told to destroy their plants, they've got to buy it by mail, they have to smoke it and not eat it. So quite frankly, the federal government's own laws, this prohibitionist approach, has created the vacuum these medical pot shops are filling." The surge in shops has caused headaches for both police and city regulators. The Vancouver Police Department issued an edict last year that it would not enforce Ottawa's drug laws as they relate to the shops, unless they posed either a risk to youth or were engaged in or operated by organized crime. City manager Penny Ballem said while the city does not have jurisdiction over the legality of marijuana, it does have powers under its zoning and business licence regulations to control the shops. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt