Pubdate: March 15, 1999 Source: The Reporter (Sunshine Coast, BC) Contact: Leslie MacFarlane Fraser POT PROBLEMS It may not be the kind of national exposure the Sunshine Coast tourist industry wanted, but local marijuana grow operations have made the pages of a well-known magazine. In the most recent issue of Canadian Geographic magazine, there is a feature story with photos which include Sechelt's Chris Clay, an associate of Vancouver's Compassion Club (a club selling marijuana for chronically ill clients), sitting beside a freshly harvested pile of marijuana bud, which the photo caption says he is bagging for the Compassion Club. The glossy picture and story that goes with it can be found inside the most recent edition of Canadian Geographic Magazine. With recent news of pot busts in the area, it may not be a surprise to read Sechelt has made a national magazine as being a supplier for the Compassion Club. Just last November, RCMP report local man William (Bill) Small was charged with producing marijuana for the purpose of trafficking, and Sechelt RCMP believe the operation was intended for use in the Compassion Club. "I wonder what Mayor Bruce Milne thinks of the blight this puts on Sechelt," Staff Sgt. Linton Robinson mused. The mayor was out of town at press-time, but Deputy Mayor Anne Kershaw expressed shock at the news. "I'm astounded. I think it may attract a segment of the tourism population we weren't aiming at," Coun. Kershaw said. "I don't think it's the kind of publicity Sechelt wants. It might make Sechelt look like a drug mecca," Kershaw said, adding the news certainly opens here eyes to the drug problem proliferating on the Sunshine Coast. "Maybe it will bring some public pressure on the government for better RCMP staffing. If there's an up side to Sechelt being exposed as some kind of drug capital, maybe that's it," Kershaw said. In response to the article in Canadian Geographic, Dean Singh, President of the Sunshine Coast Tourism Association said, "You have to take the good with the bad. The Sunshine Coast is just going to have to counter that message with a more positive one. After all, East Vancouver has garnered a lot of attention with their drug problem but it doesn't stop people from marketing the city for tourism." Chris Clay was unavailable to be reached for comment. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea