Pubdate: Wed, 14 Jun 2017 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2017 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Betsy Powell Page: GT2 POT SHOPS, NOT POT CHARGES, IRK TORY Due to this 'concern,' mayor won't back board of health position on decriminalization Mayor John Tory is refusing to join growing calls for Ottawa to immediately decriminalize pot as the federal government prepares to legalize and regulate marijuana next summer. "My concern is not with that. I mean to me, I very much favour, as soon as possible, the notion that people should not have a criminal record for simple possession of small amounts of marijuana. That's something that should have been done years ago," he said Tuesday. What's of "much more concern" is the rise in the number of rogue pot shops in Toronto a year after the city's first crackdown resulted in dozens of arrests and charges, Tory said. "They are proliferating again in the city. They're in stable neighbourhoods and causing disruptions to families in my view and disruption to other retailers," he said. "That is not something that has been legalized or contemplated as legalized. The federal government has said nothing about having some wide network of shops on every street corner pop up to sell marijuana." Municipal licensing and standards staff estimate there are currently 60 outlets selling weed in the city. The lowest number has been 37. "It's a constant ebb and flow. Some shut down. Some get closed down. Some relocate. We've always known this would be a constant battle for us and as long as there's that type of money to be made, these operations are not just going to go quietly away," said Mark Sraga, director of investigation services. Tory, a member of the police services board, stopped short of calling for another crackdown. "I am hopeful that our authorities will decide on their own just because the law is being disregarded, to go out there and enforce the law, but I don't direct them to do that. I'm simply indicating my own concern as the mayor of the city." He said residents don't want politicians telling police or city staff when or how to enforce the law - despite the fact that he wrote to licensing staff a year ago asking that "whatever enforcement mechanisms" be used to shut down the pot dispensaries. Councillor Joe Mihevc said it's unfortunate Tory is focusing his attention on pot shops - which he called a "municipal nuisance" - when criminalization is far more damaging. Mihevc chairs the board of health which this week voted to ask the federal government to decriminalize pot now so that having a small amount of pot would not be a crime. "Once you get caught up with small amounts of marijuana in your pocket, dragged into courts, then you have a criminal record, you can't go over the border, all the things that happen. Now we have an opportunity to do one year less than that," Mihevc said Tuesday. Proponents say immediate decriminalization would help remove thousands of minor pot charges from the overburdened criminal justice system. According to the federal NDP, 15,000 people, including 7,000 under 25, have been arrested for pot possession in Canada since Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced his plans to legalize. The Liberals have given no indication they will change anything pending legislation set to go into force in July 2018. "I'd love to see the mayor advocate on behalf of the 15,000 Canadians who ... have been charged in a relatively short period of time for simple possession," for a product that will be legal next year, Mihevc said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt