Pubdate: Tue, 26 Jul 2016 Source: Osoyoos Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2016 Osoyoos Times Contact: http://www.osoyoostimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3873 TOWN PRUDENT TO WAIT FOR FEDS ON MEDICAL POT DISPENSARIES The Town of Osoyoos is currently in the process of passing a bylaw that will in effect ban medical marijuana dispensaries. The zoning bylaw is seen as temporary. Not surprisingly, members of the public are divided and even town council, which tends to govern by consensus, is split on the issue. At a public hearing earlier this month, a number of people spoke about the merits of dispensaries themselves and the benefits of medical marijuana. That, however, was not the purpose of the hearing. Town council's role is not to debate the merits of marijuana. Rather, it is to make zoning decisions on where in the town such businesses can be located - if they are permitted under federal and provincial law. And that's a big "if." Currently such dispensaries are not legal under federal law, but that status is in limbo - caught between court rulings and new regulations expected to be announced in August. Currently those purchasing medical marijuana must obtain it by mail from a licensed producer. To do so, they require a document obtained from a legitimate medical practitioner - not somebody in cyberspace reached over Skype. But a Federal Court decision in February, Allard vs. Canada, upheld patients' rights to grow their own medical marijuana, and gave the government six months to come up with new regulations. The court did not specifically rule dispensaries are legal, but the courts have left the door open to further challenges of the limitations on patient access. Some municipalities have allowed dispensaries to open under certain restrictions, or at least turned a blind eye. Others more recently have cracked down. Osoyoos town administration, acting on legal advice, has recommended the bylaw banning dispensaries as a temporary measure until the federal government announces the new regulations. Although councillors C.J. Rhodes and Mike Campol argue that this bylaw is unnecessary and sends a signal of intolerance, there is merit in putting a hold on such businesses until the law is clarified. If illegal businesses open now, it will be harder to make them comply with future zoning bylaws on where they can locate. Many marijuana dispensaries are trying to become established businesses in the hopes of profiting when recreational marijuana becomes legal sometime next year. But we should be wary of rewarding businesses that act illegally and jump the gun, ahead of those that seek to comply with the law. The federal government is moving forward on both medical and recreational marijuana. Town council would be wise to let the feds act before allowing local marijuana businesses to become established. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom