Pubdate: Fri, 18 Sep 2015 Source: Vancouver 24hours (CN BC) Copyright: 2015 Vancouver 24 hrs. Contact: http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/letters Website: http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3837 Author: Michael Mui Page: 5 CLOSING POT SHOPS LIKE 'HAMMER TO KILL A FLY' Vancouver's Police Board has dismissed a complaint alleging its officers were turning a blind eye towards the city's many marijuana dispensaries - saying it has taken action, but the investigations are simply too costly and ineffective. In a lengthy response to the complaint filed by Smart Approaches to Marijuana Canada, VPD Deputy Chief Doug LePard said the department has executed 11 warrants and recommended 23 charges since 2013 against marijuana dispensaries. The most recent bust happened in August. But those were special cases. The stores were alleged to be selling to children, committing violence, or associating with organized crime. LePard gave three examples. "In the first incident a 15-year-old boy was hospitalized after allegedly purchasing edible marihuana products from the store. In the second, marihuana was allegedly traded by the proprietor for stolen property," he said. In the third case, he said police received "information that the dispensary had allegedly been selling to youths and was associated to the Hells Angels." The department also pointed to the high costs of policing dispensaries. In one 2014 example, 560 police hours-or $34,000 in salary and benefits-were spent on a single investigation. The task involved 30 hours of work to prepare a warrant, 10 detectives and a forensic unit member executing the warrant-each spending 10 hours on the search, 30 hours of investigative activity after the search, 160 hours to process evidence, and another 160 hours to complete reports and packages to Crown. "Or stated another way, the investigation required the equivalent of one officer working full-time for approximately three months," LePard said. Police said they can only do so much, and it's the municipality that must exercise its bylaw authority to shut down businesses after a warrant is executed. Without that, as was the case with one dispensary, the vendors simply open up again immediately after being raided by police. "Obviously, the lack of clarity in the federal legislation and policy that comes out of Ottawa is a huge challenge here," said Gregor Robertson, Vancouver mayor and chairman of the police board. "We're in a federal election, we will see a new parliament, we don't know what the construct of that will be ... it may all change in a matter of months." Pamela McColl, who filed the complaint, said the city should've cracked down on dispensaries as soon as the first one opened. "This is a Vancouver problem, it was very much the city manager and mayor and council who let these things go on," she said. "They could have fined them $500 per day that they had these dispensaries operating (through bylaw penalties). They could've done that but they didn't." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt