Pubdate: Thu, 14 May 2015 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2015 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Kelly Sinoski Page: A1 BRITISH COLUMBIA A 'NO MAN'S LAND' IN TERMS OF POT Municipalities take varied approaches to dispensaries, citing lack of guidance As Vancouver attempts to control a proliferation of marijuana dispensaries by regulating them, other B.C. cities have taken measures to stop the storefronts from popping up in the first place. Both North Vancouver District and Surrey have passed zoning bylaws to prohibit the marijuana dispensaries, while other municipalities say their police forces, particularly the RCMP, have zero tolerance for the illegal facilities and will shut them down. The situation underlines the disparate approach to pot dispensaries across Canada. B.C. is an anomaly, with some municipalities - like Vancouver and Victoria - considering licensing and regulation of dispensaries or turning a blind eye when they set up, while others fall more in line with the rest of Canada by not allowing the storefronts. Kelowna, for instance, has refused to issue business licences for the storefronts, which led police to shut down two dispensaries in the past couple of months. Burnaby Mayor Derek Corrigan, whose city saw one dispensary pop up near Metrotown before it was raided and shut down by the RCMP, said it will ultimately be up to the federal government to regulate the dispensaries and provincial governments to set controls across the province. Otherwise, he warned, it will lead to a "Wild West" scenario. "Right now this is completely a no man's land. The federal government has handled it so incompetently, it's left the province with no direction to take," Corrigan said. The federal government has put the onus on municipalities to enforce the law around medical pot but has done nothing to crack down as a court case filed by medical pot users continues. The case was launched by medical pot users who were told they could no longer grow pot in their homes, but would have to buy it from central facilities and receive it by mail. Vancouver officials argue the situation has resulted in 80 unlicensed pot shops across the city and is proposing to regulate the storefronts by issuing $30,000 licensing fees and closing shops near schools and community centres, while allowing them in most commercial districts. But Health Minister Rona Ambrose and Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney recently warned Vancouver council members and Vancouver police they should crack down, rather than regulate, and thereby legitimize, pot dispensaries. The move prompted the Lower Mainland Local Government Association executive last week to pass a resolution calling for the authority for municipalities to regulate marijuana dispensaries in their own cities. Surrey was the lone holdout in that decision, however, saying it doesn't allow the dispensaries so the resolution didn't apply. "We don't want to go through a situation where we have dispensaries popping up throughout our city," Surrey Coun. Bruce Hayne said. "We don't believe that's the best way to distribute medical marijuana. We've got so many youth in our community, we have drug-related issues in our city ... we just don't want to go there." Surrey in 2011 amended its zoning bylaw to ban marijuana dispensaries that are not licensed by the provincial or federal governments. Around the same time, North Vancouver District took an even stronger stance by creating a bylaw to ban all dispensaries. Officials from both municipalities, though, say they would likely reconsider their stance if the federal government regulated the dispensaries. "I don't think council is against medical marijuana; just now there's a huge gap," North Vancouver District Mayor Richard Walton said. "We've come in and used a pretty heavy hammer until the federal government gives us clarity on this." Jonathan Cote, mayor of New Westminster, agreed the federal government has to take leadership on the issue, saying pot legalization in the U.S. has changed the landscape. "Having individual mayors deal with federal issues is problematic," he said. "There's going to be a case where we start seeing these things showing up in municipalities and without a framework, it puts municipalities in a difficult spot." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt