Pubdate: Wed, 16 Aug 2017 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2017 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.theprovince.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Dan Fumano Page: A3 BLUNT DEFIANCE BY POT-SHOP SCOFFLAWS Marijuana dispensaries owe more than $1 million in unpaid tickets The value of unpaid tickets issued to Vancouver's rogue pot shops is high and only getting higher, recently passing the $1 million mark. While Vancouver continues to crack down on scofflaw dispensaries, the latest numbers show they're having limited success: as of this week, 64 dispensaries were operating without a licence compared to 31 working within the city's licensing system, while the city had issued 2,024 tickets to dispensaries with 406 tickets (or 20 per cent) paid. And of the $1.2 million worth of tickets issued by the City of Vancouver to unlicensed illegal dispensaries in the last 15 months, the city had collected $160,000 as of last week, while $1.04 million remained unpaid. The City of Vancouver was not able to provide data for collection rates on other kinds of city-issued bylaw infraction tickets for comparison, but the city's 2017 Budget and Five-Year Financial Plan reported that between 2012 and 2015, the city issued an average of 350,385 parking tickets per year, with an average of 86 per cent of those tickets paid. With Vancouver leading the way as the country's first municipal pot-sales licensing regime, other municipalities are also moving to regulate hundreds of pot storefronts sprouting up across the country in recent years, though the stores remain illegal under federal law, regardless of whether they have a municipal licence. Some cities have been far less hospitable to dispensaries, including Toronto, where police have shown Vancouver-based chains like Cannabis Culture and Canna Clinic how unwelcome they are with large-scale raids. Canada's federal government is working on a plan for the legalization of non-medicinal pot, expected to be introduced next year. Vancouver Coun. Kerry Jang, Vision Vancouver's point person on pot, said this week: "The federal government proposals have clearly followed our lead on this, as have other cities, because it was a very practical, health-based approach." Since Vancouver ordered unlicensed dispensaries to shut down in April of last year, 42 have closed or stopped selling pot, but another 64 still flout the city's bylaws and operate outside its licensing system. The city has filed 53 injunctions against dispensaries operating without business licences or zoning approval, trying to force their closure, said Vancouver's chief licence inspector Kathryn Holm this week, adding: "We are waiting to have (injunction hearings) scheduled, but unfortunately that's something we don't directly control. We are able to file and then request access to the courts, and we are just waiting to obtain that access." But despite Vancouver's lack of success collecting fines and the dozens of scofflaws still operating, Jang says the city's approach will succeed eventually, and is being held back by "unusual" court delays. If a judge grants the injunctions, the dispensaries could be ordered to shut down, Jang said, or risk a charge of contempt of court "at their own peril." None of the dispensary injunctions have been assigned a court date yet, Jang said, despite some being filed more than a year ago. Meanwhile, injunctions related to other matters have been heard more quickly, Jang said, adding: "What's really unusual about this is it's only been the pot dispensary ones that have been held up." In an emailed statement, B.C.'s Ministry of the Attorney General said the scheduling of civil matters, including injunction hearings, is the responsibility of the Office of the Chief Judge of the Provincial Court and the Chief Justices of the Superior Courts, and done "independently of government." Jang said he hopes B.C.'s new provincial government will make it a priority to provide resources to allow Vancouver's injunction hearings to be scheduled. Jang said Vancouver's bylaw inspectors will continue to ticket rogue dispensaries, adding that the piles of unpaid fines "just provide even more evidence that they're breaking the bylaw . ... But we just have to get in front of a judge." Meanwhile, the federal government is aiming to legalize recreational cannabis by July 2018, with retails sales expected to be regulated by the provinces and territories in collaboration with municipalities. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt