Pubdate: Thu, 25 Aug 2016 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2016 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Kelly Sinoski Page: A1 B.C. CITIES PUSH OTTAWA FOR A SHARE OF POT TAXES B.C. municipalities are appealing for a share of future taxes to help cover the costs of regulating pot dispensaries as marijuana appears set to become legal in Canada by next spring. The cities of Duncan, Nelson and Prince George have each put forward resolutions to the Union of B.C. Municipalities convention next month, suggesting the UBCM petition the federal government to provide local governments with a portion of future federal or provincial taxes collected through marijuana sales and distribution. Duncan's resolution also suggests the tax-sharing concept be forwarded to the federal task force set up to design the new regulatory framework for marijuana. "We want to make sure there aren't negative impacts for municipalities. Different communities are dealing with it in different ways. It's quite a mess out there right now," Duncan Mayor Phil Kent said. "If they're going to allow storefront-type dispensaries, there's going to be a competitive clamouring for space and we would have to decide where they go. We want to be part of the conversation, so if they have a framework that affects us, they should be providing some revenue to support that." It's not the first time such a request has been made. B.C.'s municipal politicians voted at their 2012 convention to lobby Ottawa to decriminalize pot and study the benefits of taxing and regulating cannabis. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau asked doctors for their opinions on the Liberals' promised legalization of the recreational use of marijuana. He's about to hear an earful from them. At one of the final sessions of the annual meeting of the Canadian Medical Association in Vancouver on Wednesday, delegates aired concerns that a psychoactive drug that affects brain development is being legitimized to the point the public thinks it's a benign substance, along with other objections. Marijuana can be prescribed for medical purposes in Canada, but it is still illegal for recreational use - although numerous doctors attending the conference commented on the ubiquitous smell of cannabis every time they went outside the Westin Bayshore, where the annual meeting has been held. Jeff Blackmer, the CMA vice-president of professional affairs, said after the feds announced plans to legalize marijuana, the CMA was asked to collect the views of the profession, so an electronic poll was recently done, eliciting nearly 800 responses. Poll findings include: Forty-five per cent of doctors said Canadians over the age of 21 should be able to buy legal marijuana and 35 per cent said the age should be 18 or 19. When asked where people should be allowed to consume non-medical marijuana, 80 per cent of doctors said their homes, 36 per cent said designated public places and 43 per cent said wherever tobacco is permitted. Seventy-two per cent said government should regulate THC levels in non-medical marijuana. Dr. Barb Blumenauer of Kamloops said children have required intensive care unit admissions and mechanical breathing support from using marijuana. She called for the establishment of a national database to measure hospitalizations. "It is a misnomer that marijuana is a harmless substance. That is certainly not the case with children," she said, adding that B.C. has seen pediatric poisoning cases, seizures and comas. Ottawa obstetrician and gynecologist Jennifer Blake said she can't recall another drug that has been licensed and legalized with "such little evidence." She said when the CMA makes its submission to the federal government, it should stress the need for quality research and long-term monitoring. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt