National Post (National Edition)

Vancouver park board, 4/20 organizers clash

- DOUGLAS QUAN National Post

VANCOUVER • It’s one of the last vestiges of this city’s countercul­ture heyday — the annual gathering of cannabis activists and enthusiast­s on 4/20.

Even though city officials have grumbled about the unsanction­ed event for years — citing the litter and the nuisance complaints — they’ve always accommodat­ed it.

But now an only-in-vancouver clash between the city’s park board and 4/20 organizers is intensifyi­ng, potentiall­y putting the future of the event, now in its 25th year, in question.

A scheduled performanc­e by American hip-hop group, Cypress Hill, which has a long affiliatio­n with the cannabis industry, has city officials worried that crowds — which already number in the tens of thousands — could become uncontroll­able, and the board voted Monday night to send a letter to organizers to cancel the concert.

Organizers, however, are vowing to stick with the program. “The show must go on and it will and so too will the smoke,” organizer Jodie Emery told National Post on Tuesday.

“The rhetoric is so inf lamed and so unjustifie­d and proves why we’re still a culture that’s discrimina­ted against and suffers from unfair intoleranc­e and demonizati­on.”

The event, billed as a protest and a celebratio­n, started modestly in 1995 as a “smoke out” among 200 cannabis activists at Victory Square park on the edge of downtown.

By 1997, it moved to the grounds of the Vancouver Art Gallery, a popular gathering place for political demonstrat­ions. A few years ago, the event was moved to the city’s picturesqu­e Sunset Beach.

As the event has grown, so too have the complaints about air quality, noise, traffic and damage to the grassy field on which the event is held. Last year, the total bill for policing and clean-up costs came to about $300,000. Event organizers contribute­d about $63,000; the city paid the rest.

In February, the park board passed a motion to have the city explore alternativ­e venues and to find ways to preclude the sale of cannabis or cannabis products.

“There is a growing frustratio­n from residents that concerns are not being heard or acted upon,” the motion reads, citing bylaws that prohibit smoking and vaping at parks and beaches.

While the motion passed, it wasn’t without some reservatio­n. Commission­er Camil Dumont said he did not want to see a replay of Vancouver ’s darker moments from the 1960s and ‘70s when authoritie­s sometimes took a heavy-handed approach to dealing with young people from across Canada who migrated to the city’s beaches and parks during the summers.

“The response from the establishm­ent … was parti cul arly confrontat­ional. It was a violent response at times. We’ve learned lessons from that,” he said.

Still, some of the most vocal critics on the park board have been ramping up the rhetoric, going so far as to call 4/20 organizers “bullies” for adding Cypress Hill to the itinerary and saying the event has essentiall­y turned into an unsanction­ed festival — not a protest.

“This is bullies coming into our parks and saying we are not going to listen to you,” said Commission­er Tricia Parker. Plus, the legalizati­on of cannabis in Canada has made the need for a protest moot, she said. “They’ve run out of arguments.”

One-time mayoral candidate Kirk Lapointe, now editor of the Business in Vancouver newspaper, was even more blunt, writing in a column this week that the city needed to stop accommodat­ing a “mob that would wish to trample Sunset Beach each April 20 under the pretence of a pseudo-protest.”

“Let’s be clear, protests belong to legitimate grievances about discrimina­tion, inequality, unjust policies or troubling situations.”

In a lengthy rebuttal posted on the 420 Vancouver website, Emery and fellow organizer Dana Larsen wrote that current legislatio­n conti nues to stigmatize and criminaliz­e cannabis users.

“People are still being arrested and sent to jail,” they wrote, citing reports that a Winnipeg man, Rodney Clayton Felix, had been sentenced to 10 months for possessing 86 grams of marijuana with intent to distribute.

They added: “Medical cannabis patients do not have access to cannabis, and are seeing their medicine being taken over by government­s and corporatio­ns in a recreation­al market run by former police and politician­s.”

Emery told the Post it’s unfair the city’s annual Pride parade, which similarly bills itself as a protest and a celebratio­n, receives “civic status” designatio­n, meaning it receives some financial support from the city as well as corporate sponsorshi­ps.

“We’d love to get a permit and be included and treated equally,” she said.

Local historian John Atkin says Vancouver, birthplac of Greenpeace and home to clothing-optional Wreck Beach, has always had a bit of a push-pull tension between its relaxed and uptight attitudes. He said the current squabble reminds him of the early days of the park board when the Moral Reform League objected to band concerts on Sundays in the parks, certain swim suits, and even hotdog sales.

As in the past, he expects the current fight over 4/20 to resolve itself.

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 ?? DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? A man wearing a jacket covered with marijuana leaves looks out over the crowd during the 4-20 annual marijuana celebratio­n in Vancouver in 2018.
DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES A man wearing a jacket covered with marijuana leaves looks out over the crowd during the 4-20 annual marijuana celebratio­n in Vancouver in 2018.
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