Pubdate: Tue, 07 Jun 2016 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2016 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Alex Ballingall Page: GT1 9 VIEWS ON POT LEGALIZATION After last week's pot raids, experts talk about restraint, acceptance of the controversial drug Everybody seems to be talking about marijuana these days. Impending legalization has prompted a many-faceted debate about how our society should incorporate the greenery, even as dispensaries selling cannabis and related goods are popping up like, well, weeds. The sprouting conversation involves many people with divergent perspectives and interests in the marijuana regime of tomorrow. Let's listen to some of them. The casual toker Marc Smith wants to believe. At 27, he owns his own roofing business, and when he comes home after a long day at work, he savours his ritual: lighting up a big bowl of weed and getting baked. With the emergence of so much easy-to-get weed from dispensaries in Toronto, Smith has been able to enjoy his marijuana much more conveniently than before. He yearns to trust that this can be the new reality, with Justin Trudeau's Liberals promising to legalize pot. But he's not quite ready to trust the government, given the recent slew of arrests and charges on the marijuana businesses in Toronto. "It's an escape for the bulls---," Smith said of his passion for toking up. "Some people like to go home and have a couple beers; some people go home and puff a joint. It's definitely on par with that. "I want to believe this is going to happen." The angry neighbour Olga Fowell doesn't want to be a buzz kill, but this is just getting ridiculous. The Forest Hill denizen said she's watched with dismay and disgust as shops selling pot have opened along Eglinton Ave. W. "This is basically glorified drug dealers with storefronts," said Fowell, a real estate agent. "Who would've thought that Forest Hill would have four pot shops?" She said the neighbourhood "sucked it up" when a weed paraphernalia shop opened a few years ago, but this is too much. "It's like slamming it right in your face," she said. Right now, her kids have to walk by a dispensary to get to tutoring class, and Fowell won't stand for it. She commends the police for their crackdown last month, when 43 dispensaries were raided, drugs were seized and dozens were arrested. "I'm not saying no to drugs for medicinal purposes, but I'm saying no to having illegal shops selling drugs," she said. "And we don't need four." The licensed producer With his warehouse lined with lush cannabis, Neil Closner might be an unlikely voice of restraint in Toronto's budding marijuana market. But the CEO of Markham-based medical weed producer MedReleaf, which has thousands of medicinal patients across the country, says things have gotten "a little out of hand." He wants the same rules for everyone. "They're jumping the gun," he said of the dozens of dispensaries that are selling marijuana in Toronto, which are not subject to the "onerous" regulations and Health Canada inspections attached to his operation. "It is an issue from a competition standpoint, but only to some degree," he said. "The product that we produce is truly a medical-grade product; the product that the dispensaries sell is quite simply not. "No one knows who grows it, where it's grown, under what conditions, what's going into it that shouldn't be in it." Closner added that because the authorities allowed the new storefront shops to proliferate,marijuana consumers are "confused" about where to find legitimate medical marijuana. As it currently stands, the only legal way to obtain medicinal weed is through the mail from a licensed producer such as MedReleaf. (A court decision in B.C. has challenged this by arguing that patients should be allowed to grow some pot themselves, while a new regime remains in the offing thanks to a Liberal campaign promise during the last federal election.) Though he's not entirely against the idea of storefront dispensaries in Canada, Closner said the important thing is robust regulation, just as with alcohol and tobacco. "The government has a role to make sure products in this country are safe," he said. The rebellious purveyor The day after police raids drove fear into the city's burgeoning dispensary scene, a pot shop at 801 Queen St. W. opened its doors in defiance. Erin Goodwin, co-manager of the Cannabis Culture shop, did the media rounds in the wake of the raids, proudly announcing that her store would sell weed to anyone who is 19 or older. It was a proclamation from the more radical, laissez-faire end of the marijuana legalization spectrum. "The people have voted with their dollars, and just the amount of people that have benefitted from the dispensaries - we can't understand what the police agenda is," Goodwin, 30, told the Star. "We're the ones who are checking the product to make sure it's clean and reputable," she said. "We're happy to be there to provide it for people." In terms of selling weed for recreational use, Goodwin said employees prefer not to "invade on people's privacy" by asking them why they're looking to buy marijuana. The idea is that it is a product, soon to be legal, that people should be able to use however they see fit. But that doesn't mean Goodwin and her colleagues at Cannabis Culture aren't scared. She said there is a sense of fear, especially after the raids, that they could be arrested and charged with drug trafficking - a charge that could result in jail time, even as there are signals that the legal framework for weed is about to change. Asked why she's willing to stick her neck out to sell weed, Goodwin said she's fighting for something bigger than that. She wants to change the perception of marijuana users, often derided as lazy or unintelligent, and show that many people from all walks of life consume cannabis and incorporate the substance as an element of their lifestyles. "These are historic times, so a lot of us are really proud to be a part of it," she said. "We're not just going to lie down." The medicinal user Lisa Campbell loves weed. She's smoked it since she was a teenager. She eats it. She rubs it on her skin. She soaks it in alcohol and absorbs it under her tongue. And since 2013, she's been a prescribed medicinal marijuana user, treating chronic wrist pain and other ailments. And though she's legally allowed to purchase weed from licensed producers, and grow some for herself, she feels the current system is too restrictive for people who want to benefit from the virtues of cannabis. "There's no reason why corporations should be the only ones to produce this medicine," said Campbell, 32, referring to rules brought in under the previous Conservative government that restricted the growing of medicinal weed to Health Canada-approved companies. "We can create a system where there's room in the market for everybody." One big flaw in the system for Campbell is that many cannabis-based products she believes can benefit sick people are currently outlawed. Tinctures and cannabis suppositories, for example, can provide pain relief in ways different from the effects of smoking, she said. The system as it stands also doesn't allow for legal production of marijuana edibles, which can range from gummy bears and brownies to lollipops and butter. "All the products that dispensaries carry in Toronto, not one licensed producer has the variety or is able to service that market, so it is filling a gap in the system for patients like myself," she said. Campbell also sees economic opportunity if the government were to open up the craft marijuana market, not unlike the explosion of breweries in the province in recent years. "I'm scared at the future of dispensaries, especially all these small independent businesses which are patient-driven," she said. "This is what Toronto is all about: social innovation and coming up with creative new ways of doing things." The legal defender Things have been busy lately for Kendra Stanyon. The Toronto barrister is representing so many dispensaries these days that she can't count them off the top of her head. "Maybe over 10," she said. She acknowledges that there are legitimate worries about the proliferation of such businesses without regulation - and admits that most dispensaries are operating outside the law - but blamed the government for creating the vacuum in which they operate. She added that many medical patients don't have legal options for the cannabis they feel best treats their ailments, such as edibles and ointments. Courts in the country have recognized this, as well as the anecdotal evidence that marijuana can help remedy health concerns, Stanyon noted. "Certainly it's been confusingly inconsistent," she said. "There are real concerns (about dispensaries), but I think there are ways to address them without raids." The 'legalize it' politician The war on drugs is an abject failure, and the time has come to try something new; downtown Councillor Joe Cressy has been saying that for a long time. He argues we've arrived at a point where it's clear criminalization doesn't work, while recreational use of marijuana isn't entirely safe. The answer, in his mind, is reasonable government regulation for the legal sale of marijuana. In a nutshell, it's all about public health. "We need consistency, right across the country," Cressy told the Star, adding that a too-strict regulatory regime will drive people to the black market, while one that's too liberal would normalize the harms of recreational pot use. While the federal government needs time to draft its new rules, there needs to be "clear guidance" for cities such as Toronto, so that there isn't a vacuum in which dispensaries can operate without any rules. "It needs to be very clear, just like we've done with alcohol and tobacco," he said. The Crack Down politician In Jon Burnside's eyes, the pot dispensaries in Toronto are indistinguishable from drug dealers on the street. They just have fancier wallpaper. "It's a bunch of people trying to make a buck, and, in my opinion, they're doing it illegally," said Burnside, the councillor for Ward 26, Don Valley West, who was elected for the first time in 2014. "Essentially they're dealing drugs." Burnside is a vocal supporter of the police decision to raid dispensaries across the city, arguing that just because laws surrounding weed are going to change doesn't give new businesses carte blanche to open up a cannabis dispensary. He added that he has concerns about youth smoking marijuana and that any legalization regime will need to have strong regulations for any businesses that sell the stuff. "It's not like they're baking bread here. Well, maybe they are with pot in it, but you get my point." The Doctor Doctor's orders: don't smoke weed before you're 25. Bernard Le Foll, a University of Toronto professor and researcher at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, said people who start using marijuana in their youth are more likely to develop a dependency later in life. There is also the risk of damaging one's intelligence quotient and mucking up the cognitive processes of the developing brain, he said. Le Foll's advice bears consideration as the debate rages over how to accommodate the incoming legalization of the drug. Asked about the risks of cannabis use, Le Foll said that, unlike alcohol, cocaine or even nicotine, there's no way to die from an overdose. "Cannabis is much safer," he said. But that doesn't mean weed is harmless. Smoking weed generates toxic components, not unlike cigarettes, he said, while research has shown a correlation between heavy marijuana use and the presence of mental illnesses such as schizophrenia. He added, however, that it isn't clear what causes the association. At the end of the day, Le Foll says any cannabis consumption should be done with caution and care. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt