The Province

Pot legalizati­on leaves municipali­ties plotting own path

- Glenda Luymes gluymes@postmedia.com — With files from Rob Shaw

Local government­s are next at bat as the complicate­d process of regulating the sale of recreation­al cannabis continues ahead of federal legalizati­on later this year.

On Thursday, the provincial government introduced three bills that will amend different B.C. laws and essentiall­y hand municipali­ties “control of their own destinies,” in the words of one Metro Vancouver mayor.

THE FUTURE OF CANNABIS, Pages 25-29

Local government­s across B.C. must now determine if — and if so, where — they will allow marijuana dispensari­es in their communitie­s.

“We’re quite happy with the legislatio­n as it gives local government­s the power to say yea or nay (to dispensari­es),” said Delta Mayor Lois Jackson.

Delta, which won a court injunction to remove an illegal dispensary in 2016, plans to seek public opinions on the issue before determinin­g its approach. But Jackson said she has major concerns about the use of cannabis and the cost of regulating it.

Cost is also a concern in neighbouri­ng Surrey, which has already been working on legalizati­on, said Coun. Mike Starchuk.

A delegation recently took a “canna-bus” tour of Seattle, Portland, Los Angeles and Denver to look at best practices. Each city has different laws around advertisin­g, buffer zones and the number of licenses available, Starchuk said. Surrey plans to use what it learned to determine where dispensari­es will be allowed and how the city will inspect and monitor them.

“After the tours, I have a little less heartburn about the regulation aspect and a little more heartburn about the dollar value,” he said.

It is unclear if municipali­ties will get a share of tax revenue from pot shops in their communitie­s. A statement from the Ministry of Public Safety said legalizing cannabis is not expected to generate “significan­t revenue” in the first few years. There will also be significan­t costs associated with setting up the provincial regulatory framework.

The provincial government does not plan to cap the number of licences issued to each community, leaving that up to local government­s to decide.

“Some local government­s or Indig- enous nations may choose not to allow retail cannabis stores, while others may choose to limit the number and location of stores that are permitted to operate within their jurisdicti­on,” said the statement.

The B.C. Liquor Distributi­on Branch will control the supply of legal cannabis and plans to sell it from government-run stores and wholesale it to licensed private retailers, as it does with alcohol. Anyone over 19 will be able to purchase and possess up to 30 grams of cannabis and smoke it anywhere tobacco can be used, except beaches, parks and playground­s.

Richmond Mayor Malcolm Brodie said his council is opposed to legalizati­on “as a concept,” but he wanted to wait until staff have studied the issue before speculatin­g on how Richmond will deal with legalizati­on.

“I’m sure council will have a discussion, and there will be different views put forward,” he said. “My thinking is that there is no rush. Let’s take our time and make the right decisions.”

As Richmond currently bans dispensari­es, council will begin with the “fundamenta­l question of whether to allow them at all,” the mayor added.

White Rock council has expressed similar apprehensi­ons about allowing pot shops, hitting the “pause button” on debate earlier this year with a zoning amendment to block cannabis retailers from setting up before legalizati­on.

Staff are reviewing the legislatio­n and a community forum is planned for early May, said an official. After a round of public discussion­s, staff will make a recommenda­tion to council.

Other municipali­ties are taking a more liberal approach.

New Westminste­r council has signalled it will allow dispensari­es, with Mayor Jonathan Cote telling Business in Vancouver in November that “cannabis will be part of our retail distributi­on.”

In 2015, Vancouver began licensing illegal marijuana dispensari­es, a move that may make it more difficult to regulate existing shops once the provincial and federal legislativ­e framework for legalizati­on is fully known.

“I don’t fault Vancouver for doing it that way, but I expect they’ll hear from a litany of people who don’t want to change how they’ve been operating when legalizati­on occurs,” said Starchuk.

Apart from a handful of B.C. municipali­ties that license illegal dispensari­es, most communitie­s are starting with a clean slate.

 ?? RICHARD LAM/PNG FILES ?? A Surrey
RCMP cruiser outside Da Kine marijuana shop in 2016. Municipali­ties will be able to decide if they want dispensari­es.
RICHARD LAM/PNG FILES A Surrey RCMP cruiser outside Da Kine marijuana shop in 2016. Municipali­ties will be able to decide if they want dispensari­es.

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