Pubdate: Thu, 21 Apr 2016 Source: Vancouver 24hours (CN BC) Page: 4 Copyright: 2016 Vancouver 24 hrs. Contact: http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/letters Website: http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3837 Author: Ada Slivinski TIME FOR VPD TO MAKE 420 ARRESTS Why do pot smokers get a free pass with their illegal activity on city land? When the reefer revelers are all gathered in one place, police should round them up and fine or arrest them. Though it makes sense that policing pot is not a priority for the Vancouver Police Department, there is one day of the year they should make an exception - 420. Vancouver Police Chief Adam Palmer, when asked about the drug, told 24 Hours, "Marijuana falls into the scheme of things, but definitely low down in priority." This has been the VPD's line on marijuana for years. Of course on most days, using police resources to hunt down teenagers with a joint in their parents' basement doesn't make sense, but when they are all gathered in a public place, engaging openly in illegal activity, too drugged up to make a getaway or resist arrest, half the work is already done. Arrests should be made and fines doled out. At least then the "protest" could help compensate taxpayers for costs associated with traffic disruptions, inevitable clean up and emergency room visits. Last year, 64 people - including teenagers - flooded the St. Paul's Hospital ER suffering from nausea, vomiting or heart palpitations after participating in the pot party. Let's not forget that although Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has promised to legalize the stuff, recreational marijuana is still illegal. Imagine if some other illegal activity went on out in the open this way. If sex workers were to set up prostitution booths on the beach, would we allow it? The 420 event is not a protest, it's a party, yet somehow, without the explicit permission of the City of Vancouver, it grows more organized and sophisticated every year. Roads are closed, a stage and booths - many of which have been booked and paid for in advance - are set up and marijuana is sold in broad daylight. This year, the event has outgrown its Vancouver Art Gallery home and moved to Sunset Beach, causing the Park Board to close the Vancouver Aquatic Centre for fear of a hotboxing effect. Of course, anyone who wants to plan any legal event on city land has to go through mountains of paperwork before they come close to putting tent peg in the ground. In this city, smoking of any kind in public parks can result in a $250 fine, but the over 20,000 smokers using illegal drugs at an organized event? They get a free pass. It's a double standard and it's time it stopped. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D