Pubdate: Fri, 13 Nov 2015 Source: Coast Reporter (CN BC) Copyright: 2015 Coast Reporter Contact: http://www.coastreporter.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/580 Author: Christine Wood District of Sechelt MEDPOT BYLAW HEADED TO FOURTH READING The District of Sechelt is one vote away from adopting a new medical marijuana zoning bylaw that would restrict where future medicinal pot facilities could operate. Previously, on Oct. 7, Sechelt council couldn't agree on the bylaw that was before them, which would restrict medicinal grow-ops to areas at least one kilometre away from schools and 500 metres away from parks and playgrounds. However, when the bylaw was brought back by Mayor Bruce Milne on Nov. 4, all but councillors Mike Shanks and Doug Wright were in favour and it passed through three readings. Fourth reading and final adoption of the bylaw is expected at the Nov. 18 regular council meeting. "I wanted council to reconsider it for a number of reasons," Milne said on Nov. 4 when he reintroduced the bylaw. "First of all, any bylaw we have is subject to a lot of community work and work by staff, and I think that we have heard from the community fairly clearly on this." He also noted that if council didn't create a zoning bylaw, medical marijuana grow-ops could set up anywhere in Sechelt under the District's definition of horticulture. "The other end of the continuum is to restrict it so it's virtually impossible to have any facilities whatsoever, even if they're legitimate business opportunities, and we can't go too far on that end of the spectrum either because it's actually illegal for municipalities to zone legitimate businesses out of existence. So you have to allow some place for them to carry on in the community," Milne said. "We have to find a balance. I think this bylaw comes very close to that balance and I'm not sure that taking it to another public hearing or tweaking it in ways will actually give us a considerably better bylaw." Milne said that after talking with council and community members, he saw four main issues in regards to medical marijuana, two of which could be addressed in the zoning bylaw. "Odour and noise are very serious concerns, but they can't be addressed in zoning so I have to put those two aside. They're both issues that will be considered in development permits and in business licensing," Milne said. "The two that remain, serious issues that can be dealt with through zoning, are proximity to residents and residential zones and proximity to schools or playgrounds or places where children are." He noted residential areas must be at least "two football fields" (100 metres) away from any new medicinal grow-op site and that while there was some discussion by council in the past about increasing the distance to parks and playgrounds, there was no demonstrated security risk to children to warrant it. Milne suggested it was "probably much more of a cultural issue where you don't want marijuana to be visible and have parents have to explain as they walk to school what that warehouse is." On that front, Milne said any medicinal marijuana facility started under the new zoning bylaw would have to be set back from the lot line five metres, would be surrounded by security fencing and would have to be screened with vegetation. "We really want to look at what we've done here and whether or not there's any real genuine concern for children going to and from school or being in school who have to walk by a hedged warehouse where you can't even see the chainlink fence because of the hedging," Milne said. Once given the floor, Wright said he still wanted to see a larger buffer between grow-ops and playgrounds and Shanks said he'd rather see medicinal marijuana production limited to industrial areas zoned I-5 only. "In the present situation, there are apparently 10 locations where medicinal marijuana plants can be established. If it was strictly confined to the Industrial-5 area, that would mean that it could only go on the airport property, which is far enough away that there wouldn't be any impact," Shanks said. Due to their objections, Wright and Shanks voted against the new zoning bylaw while the rest of council passed it through three readings, without any changes. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom