Pubdate: Tue, 02 Aug 2016 Source: Metro (Calgary, CN AB) Copyright: 2016 Metro Canada Contact: http://www.metronews.ca/Calgary Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4471 Author: Brodie Thomas Page: 8 POT PURVEYOR EYES CALGARY Police say plan for mail-order marijuana is not legal The owner of Erbachay Health Centres was in Calgary in July, handing out business cards and flyers in hopes of getting a toehold on this side of the Rockies. Now that Canadians know recreational marijuana will soon be legalized, it's getting harder to hold the floodgates back, even if it's in the guise of medical services. Calgary City Council recently passed a bylaw limiting where medical marijuana counselling services can set up shop. Businesses offering that service can't be within 300 metres of one another, or 150 metres of a school. While there are several counselling services that will help you get a prescription, Calgary has yet to see dispensaries open up shop, as they have by the hundreds in Vancouver, even though they are technically illegal in many cases. Delainey said he was scouting out possible locations for a dispensary while in Calgary, but mainly he wanted to drum up mail order business from this region. "Delivery is a flat $10 fee," he said. "It comes by registered mail - either Canada post or Purolator." He doesn't require you to have a prescription for medical marijuana - just proof that you are on some form of medication. That could be a pill bottle or a prescription. What he's doing is illegal, according to the Calgary Police Service. A spokesperson there explained that if a dispensary is federally licensed and a customer has a prescription, then the police will not get involved. In any other instance, people may be opening themselves up to criminal code offences such as trafficking or possession. Delainey said he is providing medical cannabis under the R vs. Smith Supreme Court Ruling of June 11, 2015. "The court unanimously declared that providing cannabis for medical purposes is legal," said Delainey. That ruling did strike down bans on possession of marijuana in forms other than a dried plant. Health Canada has since said it did not alter other regulations on who can produce, possess and sell marijuana. Delainey said he reached out to the mayor and all members of city council to talk about his business, but did not receive any responses back. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt