Pubdate: Tue, 16 May 2017 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2017 The London Free Press Contact: http://www.lfpress.com/letters Website: http://www.lfpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Dale Carruthers Page: A1 POT SHOPS FACE ROUND 2 Back in business after police raids, illegal marijuana dispensaries now in London bylaw enforcers' sights London appears to be taking a page from Toronto's playbook in its bid to crack down on illegal pot shops that refuse to die. Police raided five marijuana dispensaries across London two months ago, only to watch four of them reopen, including one that reorganized as a delivery-only service. Now, the city's bylaw office is setting its sights on the illegal businesses, a strategy that's proven successful in Canada's largest city, but one critics say is doomed to push the operations further underground. "We have active enforcement files on all the dispensaries that were addressed in the joint investigation," London bylaw boss Orest Katolyk said, referring to the five dispensaries police raided March 2. City officials in Toronto, where illegal pot shops once numbered around 150, have targeted landlords renting spaces to dispensaries, warning the property owners they could face hefty fines for violating zoning bylaws. That approach, combined with repeated police raids, has reduced the number of pot shops to fewer than 50. "We are very much aware of what Toronto and other jurisdictions are doing in regard to marijuana dispensaries," Katolyk said. Though bylaw officials were involved in the March 2 raids, Katolyk said at the time his office wasn't going after dispensary landlords. Katolyk was tight-lipped when asked what consequences the bylaw investigation could have. "It means that we have active files and potential charges may be laid where the dispensaries contravene city council's bylaws," he said. "That's probably the most I can say at this point." A London police spokesperson declined to comment. The head of a national marijuana business association said the London strategy is bound to fail, just like the previous police raids. "That's a completely insane and backward way to approach the matter, because it's never going to address the root problem," said Ian Dawkins, president of the Cannabis Commerce Association of Canada, a trade association representing dispensaries and other cannabis-related businesses. Using bylaw enforcement as a tool to crack down on dispensaries will only push them underground, said Dawkins, citing the delivery-only model adopted by some dispensaries, including the Chronic Hub in London. Proponents of dispensaries often cite Vancouver as a model. Vancouver licenses dispensaries, setting strict rules about where they can operate and the hours they must keep. City inspectors fine pots shops caught breaking the rules or operating without a licence. Officials in Vancouver champion their approach as more efficient and cost-effective than police raids. But Dawkins said the Vancouver model isn't without its flaws, citing the many dispensary operators who refuse to pay fines. "None of these tickets have actually been paid out. They've just been contested, and the city has wasted hundreds of thousands of dollars of legal fees," he said, warning London could see the same thing happen. The future of dispensaries remains hazy following the Liberal government's recent tabling of legislation to legalize and regulate marijuana for recreational use. It's expected that move will take effect by July 1, 2018. Under the federal proposal, provinces would decide how pot is sold and distributed. Adults could possess as much as 30 grams of cannabis. They could either buy it from a provincially approved retailer or grow as many as four pot plants each. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt