Pubdate: Thu, 25 Feb 2016 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2016 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/opinion/send_a_letter Website: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Alexandra Paul Page: A13 POT-GROWING RULING HAILED Users now allowed to raise pot for own consumption WINNIPEG medical-marijuana patients hailed a federal court ruling that struck down "arbitrary and overbroad" legislation from the former Conservative government banning Canadian medical pot users from growing their own weed. And the one company in Winnipeg with a federal licence to supply medical marijuana indicated the ruling won't affect it, at least not in the short term. The city's most vocal advocate for medical-marijuana rights said even without knowing whether Ottawa will appeal the ruling, he couldn't contain his delight. "I'm super-excited, very elated. We won as far as I'm concerned," Steven Stairs said. "The courts have said we have a right to access, that eliminating our right to grow was unconstitutional." Judge Michael Phelan found the Marijuana for Medical Purposes Regulations, which required patients to buy from licensed producers, violated their charter rights. In a written federal court ruling issued Wednesday in Vancouver, Phelan suspended the decision to strike down the law for six months, allowing the federal Liberal government time to create a new medical-marijuana regime. "I agree that the plaintiffs have... demonstrated that cannabis can be produced safely and securely with limited risk to public safety and consistently with the promotion of public health," the judge ruled. "Their lives have been adversely impacted by the imposition of the relatively new regime to control the use of marijuana for medical purposes," Phelan wrote. A lawyer who represents some of the private companies in the budding industry said the ruling is not unexpected. "They're not going to see a mass exodus of customers," said Trina Fraser, a partner with the Ottawa Brazeau Seller law firm who specializes in helping companies apply for federal licences to cultivate medical marijuana. "The importance that those licensed producers place on the future is the recreational market," she said. "All the people really that were going to grow it at home were doing it anyway under the injunction that had been granted over a year ago in the Allard case," Fraser said. The constitutional challenge was launched by four British Columbia residents who argued the 2013 legislation blocked their access to affordable medicine. One of them was Neil Allard, whose name became the shorthand reference for the case. "There are a thousand questions that spin out of this decision. But what it boils down to, as this decision stands, is there will be a right to cultivate, to some degree, for medical-use purposes," Fraser said. Delta 9 Bio Tech, the one private company in Winnipeg that cultivates and distributes marijuana under a federal licence, has seen its client list more than triple in the last year, despite the Allard court proceedings. Delta 9 produces 30 varieties of marijuana ranging from $5 to $10 a gram for licensed medical patients; the client list has jumped to 1,200 from about 300 in the last year, suggesting many patients don't want to grow their own pot. Some 70 per cent of the client list also vapes their pot through a vapourizer Delta 9 sells. The company touts its subsidies for low-income clients. They amounted to $150,000 in discounts in the last year. "Immediately, I don't think this has any implications on our business, our patients, our physicians. We're business as usual," Delta 9 vice-president John Arbuthnot said. Health Canada told industry growers it's reviewing the decision and expects to "issue guidance in the very near future," Arbuthnot said. Ottawa had yet to say publicly Wednesday whether the government will appeal the ruling. Meanwhile, the Winnipeg company isn't ruling out an eventual expansion to the recreational-marijuana market. "At Delta 9 Bio Tech, we are focused on the medical side. We obviously are positioning, and exploring the opportunities that may be presented by legalization. We will certainly look to move into that market when it presents itself, as appropriate," Arbuthnot said. Phelan also extended a court injunction allowing people who held licences to grow their own marijuana to continue until a further court order. That order includes Stairs and approximately 200 medical-marijuana users in the province with licences to grow their own pot. Across Canada, 30,000 of the 40,000 registered medical-marijuana patients hold grow licences that were hanging on the decision in Vancouver. "The only real concern I have now is the Liberal government and its intentions regarding their legalization efforts and incorporating this court decision into that model," Stairs said. "They've been given six months to respond and come up with a plan, so let's hope with the consultations they have going on right now in the Senate, maybe they'll take this as a stepping stone, a push in the right direction," Stairs said. The Liberals have committed to regulating and legalizing recreational marijuana but have said little about any plans for medical marijuana since being elected. - - with files from The Canadian Press - --- MAP posted-by: Matt