Penticton Herald

Municipali­ties happy with new laws

Retail landscape revealed in B.C.’s proposed pot laws

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VICTORIA — The B.C. government has unveiled its plan for regulating the sale of recreation­al marijuana, in a move that municipali­ties say gives them welcome breathing room.

Solicitor General Mike Farnworth shed more light on the shifting retail landscape in a trio of bills he introduced Thursday that will, if passed, determine the legal framework for the drug’s regulation.

“It puts our province in a position to not only meet the federal deadline, but does so in a way that satisfies our provincial goals to protect children and youth, prioritize public health and safety, keep cannabis out of the hands of criminals, keep our roads safe and protect B.C.’s economic prosperity,” Farnworth said.

While the introducti­on of legislatio­n marks a big step toward regulating recreation­al pot in B.C., some grey areas remain. Provincial staff are still working on a price point that will stem the black market and British Columbia is hamstrung until the federal government makes decisions on the legality of edibles and impairment detection technology for drivers, he said.

Under the legislatio­n, the province would have jurisdicti­on over wholesale distributi­on of cannabis and sales would be allowed to buyers who are at least 19 years old.

But it would be up to each municipali­ty to determine if and where recreation­al marijuana can be sold, and whether it is sold in private or government stores, or a mix of both.

Provincial­ly run pot shops would operate under the banner B.C. Cannabis Store, similar to the B.C. Liquor Store model. The first government-operated retail store is expected to open by late summer, and public sales would also be available online.

Farnworth said a range of products would be sold at public stores, including oils and dried marijuana.

Anyone interested in operating a private store — including existing dispensari­es — must apply for a licence. Operators must also pass a background check and while minor offences will be overlooked, major criminal offences like traffickin­g will not.

“There will be comprehens­ive background checks that look into the whole range of where the money’s coming from, who the directors of the company are, is there any link to organized crime,” Farnworth said.

“If you have any links to organized crime, you’re going to be out the door — you won’t get a licence.”

Farnworth said he’s confident the administra­tive penalties are strong enough to prevent rogue dispensari­es from continuing to operate illegally. A new provincial community-safety unit will target illegal sellers.

Vancouver Coun. Kerry Jang, who co-chaired the provincial-municipal cannabis committee and spoke on behalf of the Union of B.C. Municipali­ties, said local government­s are “delighted” by the proposed laws.

“Municipali­ties have a very clear say as to whether or not their community would like a cannabis shop. I think the penalties and enforcemen­t, which is now the exclusive role of the provincial government, is excellent. And they have the teeth and the powers to actually bring everybody into compliance quickly and sort of end the craziness that’s out there in the province.”

The union is still working on revenue-sharing with the province, Jang said, but that’s less of a concern now that municipali­ties won’t be expected to carry a heavy enforcemen­t burden.

There will also be a 90-day driving prohibitio­n on drivers found under the influence of drugs and a zero-tolerance policy for new drivers in the graduated licensing program found with any THC in their systems.

Provincial implementa­tion timelines are dependent upon the proposed federal legislatio­n receiving royal assent.

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