The Hamilton Spectator

Hamilton police prep for legal marijuana

Meanwhile, crack down on illegal dispensari­es

- NICOLE O’REILLY

Hamilton police Chief Eric Girt has been eagerly awaiting the provincial announceme­nt about how cannabis will be sold so that police can prepare for how they will tackle post-legalizati­on enforcemen­t.

“You need that legislativ­e framework to regulate this,” he said, in a sit-down interview with The Spectator about cannabis late last week, where he expressed concern about regulatory uncertaint­y with two months to go before legalizati­on.

Ontario announced Monday it will only sell recreation­al cannabis online come Oct. 17, with “tightly regulated” private retail stores by next April. Dispensari­es remain illegal, and the government has not yet set criteria for who can apply to become a legal retailer.

On Tuesday, Girt was at a Canadian Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police meeting. Cannabis legalizati­on was on the agenda. The service said they expect to have an update when Girt returns later this week.

Despite the uncertaint­y, Hamilton police recently seconded an officer to an inter-agency team, run by the Criminal Intelligen­ce Service Ontario (CISO), with a goal of tackling dispensari­es, Girt said.

He couldn’t provide any details about where and how the team will be run, but said he believes they’re “preparing.”

CISO is a partnershi­p between law enforcemen­t and the government that investigat­es gangs, drugs, weapons and other cross-province, serious crimes.

A spokespers­on for the Ministry of Community Safety and Correction­al Services declined to answer questions about the cannabis dispensary team.

“That isn’t something we can speak to given the sensitive nature of the activities involved,” Brent Ross said.

Former Hamilton dispensary owner and activist Britney Guerra said she’s optimistic those involved in the industry will find a way to get into the legal market.

“I’m really happy that the province has allowed the private sector to get involved,” she said.

Guerra previously owned a King Street East location of Cannabis Culture — the chain that was owned by high-profile cannabis activists Marc and Jodie Emery. She was among five, including the Emerys, to plead guilty to drug charges last year in a deal that saw others have their charges dropped.

While those with criminal records cannot own a legal retail store, she said she’s “sure that lots of people that owned (a) dispensary currently will be able to get into the industry somehow.”

She doesn’t expect there will be mass closures of dispensari­es. But, if she still owned a location, she would tell staff to prepare for a sudden closure if that’s what was needed to try to make a legal applicatio­n.

“A legal applicatio­n is more important than keeping a dispensary going as long as possible.”

But as long as dispensari­es remain illegal, police will continue to execute search warrants, and charge employees and owners, Girt said, during the interview.

This new CISO team isn’t the only tool police are eyeing.

Included in the cannabis legalizati­on bill, which received royal assent at the end of June, are stiff penalties for violators: up to three years in prison and a $5million fine.

“The fact that they’ve included fines up into $5 million ... I would call that a fairly stiff penalty, which is what we’ve asked for,” Girt said, adding that will “hopefully make it not profitable to engage in that conduct.”

Dispensari­es have been a hot topic in Hamilton, with cannabis advocates criticizin­g police for targeting people they believe are doing no harm, and frustrated neighbours questionin­g why police and the city simply can’t shut the doors. The truth has been much more complicate­d.

“It changes on a daily basis, we shut one down and another opens, we lay charges and three weeks later it reopens,” Girt said.

But the steep fine could change that.

“If (a dispensary owner) gets convicted twice, that’s $10 million; I’m going to hazard a guess that’s going to impact on your bottom line.”

Girt said he doesn’t believe it should be the job of police to inspect or regulate the legal market. But where someone breaks the law, police services are dutybound to enforce.

The City of Hamilton bylaw department counts the number of open dispensari­es in the city at 53. In an email, licensing director Ken Leendertse said they’ve investigat­ed over 94 and are aware of 41 that have closed.

To date, bylaw officers have issued 81 zoning notices, 52 zoning charges, 38 licensing tickets, 11 sign violation notices and 54 fees for service.

The city has no plans to change its approach in light of the provincial announceme­nt, he said. They continue to investigat­e for municipal bylaw offences.

There are “no new bylaws planned at this time,” Leendertse said.

 ??  ?? Police Chief Eric Girt
Police Chief Eric Girt

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