Times Colonist

View Royal among local government­s seeking a cut of marijuana revenues

- GEMMA KARSTENS-SMITH

VANCOUVER — Police department­s and local government­s are asking British Columbia for a cut of marijuana revenues as the province crafts regulation­s for legalized pot.

The provincial government asked for public input last month as it develops new rules. Submission­s are posted online and will be accepted until Wednesday.

Feedback so far includes recommenda­tions from View Royal and Port Coquitlam for pot profits to be directed to municipali­ties to address costs associated with enforcemen­t.

The British Columbia Associatio­n of Municipal Chiefs of Police echoes that recommenda­tion, saying in its submission that the “cost download” of enforcemen­t needs to be considered when a revenue-sharing system is developed.

The associatio­n also wants the province to deal with drug-impaired driving the same way as drunk driving.

Police chiefs say the public must have “reasonable access to legal cannabis” or consumers will turn to the black market.

Several existing marijuana producers, retailers and interest groups have weighed in with ideas on how cannabis should be sold in B.C. Several want to be included in the rules.

Buddha Barn, a licensed cannabis retailer in Vancouver, says allowing existing marijuana retailers a way to participat­e in the recreation­al marijuana marketplac­e is “the only way to avoid chaos.”

Marijuana-related businesses are also urging the province to tread carefully when it comes to strict rules around the advertisin­g and branding of recreation­al pot.

“Movements to codify plain packaging must be avoided completely as they will hobble the ability of legal producers to properly compete against the illicit market,” says Tilray, a licensed medicinal marijuana producer based in Nanaimo.

Some provinces have released details on how they plan to approach legalized recreation­al marijuana.

New Brunswick will sell pot through a subsidiary of its liquor commission, with knowledgea­ble staff available to guide customers.

Ontario will set the minimum age at 19 and sell cannabis through government-run outlets, while Alberta has proposed to make 18 the minimum age to use cannabis. It has yet to announce whether pot will be sold through government-run stores or private operators.

The Nova Scotia government is seeking feedback on a legal age of 19, with sales through a Crown corporatio­n such as the Nova Scotia Liquor Corp.

The federal government is expected to legalize recreation­al marijuana in July 2018, although some provinces, territorie­s and police agencies have lobbied for a delay. Federal Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor has said the government is sticking to its deadline.

The B.C. government is expected to release a report on public input in December.

• Submission­s can be made until 4 p.m. on Dec. 1 at engage.gov.bc.ca/BCcannabis­regulation.

 ??  ?? Pot and parapherna­lia at a medical marijuana dispensary in Vancouver.
Pot and parapherna­lia at a medical marijuana dispensary in Vancouver.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada