Pubdate: Thu, 19 May 2016 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Page: GT1 Copyright: 2016 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: David Rider RESIDENTS' OPINIONS SHIFT ON POT SHOPS But Forum Research poll finds that almost half are still fine with medical marijuana dispensaries A shrinking but sizable number of Torontonians think the medicinal marijuana dispensaries popping up all over the city should be allowed to remain open. A Forum Research poll of 804 Torontonians conducted Monday also found most people are hazy on whether the shops, some of which sell pot with no prescription required, are legal. The poll comes as the city of Toronto launches a crackdown on the unlicensed dispensaries, with police officers hand-delivering letters to the business's landlords warning of possible future "consequences." Health Canada says only licensed medical marijuana producers can distribute pot to medical marijuana users with a doctor's prescription. The city of Toronto says those producers can only locate in areas zoned for industrial use. However, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's declaration that marijuana will be legalized and regulated for recreational use has created a legal grey zone, with some questioning the wisdom of a crackdown when there might be a new law by the time any charges go to court. Asked if the dispensaries should be allowed to remain open, 48 per cent of respondents said yes, 36 per cent said no and 17 per cent didn't know. That approval level is down from late March, when more than half of Torontonians - 57 per cent - said the dispensaries should be allowed to operate, with 30 per cent saying no and 13 per cent unsure. Just over three-quarters of respondents agreed with Mayor John Tory that marijuana dispensaries need to be regulated to keep them away from schools and community centres. Some 16 per cent disagreed and 8 per cent didn't know. Just over half of Torontonians agreed with Tory that the proliferation of pot shops - the number has surpassed 100 in a matter of weeks - is "alarming" while just under one-third disagreed and 16 per cent didn't know. "It appears that, while one half still accepts the right of these places to dispense their wares, even in their neighbourhoods, the majority also accepts that there need to be regulations in place," said Lorne Bozinoff, president of Forum Research. Some marijuana dispensary operators require prescriptions and say they are scrupulous about selling their products only to legitimately sick people, some of them terminal, who are ill-served by Ottawa's bureaucratic mail-based distribution regime. Forum's interactive voice response telephone survey of randomly selected voters is considered accurate plus or minus 4 percentage points, 19 times out of 20. Other findings include: Some 42 per cent of Torontonians don't know if the dispensaries are legal or not, compared to 32 per cent who say they are not legal and 26 per cent who say they are. Almost one-quarter of respondents say there is a pot dispensary in their neighbourhood - a percentage that has doubled since a survey in late March. Those most likely to live near a dispensary include younger, wealthier downtown residents and people with children. Fewer Etobicoke and North York residents report they know of one in their neighbourhood. Because that is a subset of total respondents, the margin of error is higher. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom