Pubdate: Thu, 16 Jul 2015 Source: Winnipeg Sun (CN MB) Copyright: 2015 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.winnipegsun.com/letter-to-editor Website: http://www.winnipegsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/503 Author: David Larkins Page: 3 Medical Marijuana Dispensary Owner Wants to Meet With Mayor After Being Told to Shut Down by Police PIPE DREAM? A day after Winnipeg police told him to shut down, the owner of the city's first medical marijuana dispensary says he wants to meet with the mayor. But Glenn Price vows he will keep doing what he says is the right thing, dishing out prescription marijuana to Winnipeggers in need, no matter what legal repercussions may be in store for him. Price said police came to his Your Medical Cannabis Headquarters shop on Main Street on Tuesday and forced him to shut down his operation, which he said provides services to more than 225 patients. Price said he offers help to people suffering from cancer and post-traumatic stress disorder, among other ailments. He said not offering help to them is akin to a doctor watching a patient die. "They can make a martyr out of me, they can do whatever they want. I'm just here to bring awareness," Price said. "... Yes, I have fear of legal backlash. I'm constantly in fear of that, but from what the people in Winnipeg have told me and the people that I've helped and the stories they've told me, I can't stop helping these people." Price said he provides "one-to-one consultation" to patients and educates them on making sound purchases. He said he's even flagged seven "phony prescriptions" as evidence he's interested in operating in a professional manner. "I'm doing everything that I can in my power to make sure that there's no one having phony prescriptions or over-prescribing or anything like that," he said. Last month, Vancouver became the first Canadian city to regulate dispensaries despite pushback from the federal Conservative government. Now Price said he wants to meet with Mayor Brian Bowman, to hear the stance of the city's leader. "I want his opinion on it and I want him to hear my views on it," Price said, adding he "reached out" to Bowman to broker a meeting when he opened his operation two weeks ago. "It would be the same thing as the city of Vancouver standing up to the federal government. The same thing that Vancouver's done could happen here as long as it's handled properly and both parties are open-minded." Price said he would hold off on resuming operations until after meeting with Bowman, but fully intends to restart his business. The Sun sent a request for comment to Bowman's communications director on Wednesday. Winnipeg police said they could not comment on what they referred to as an ongoing investigation. Price estimates he has spent upwards of $30,000 getting the business started. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom