Times Colonist

Victoria mayor ‘not OK’ with new pot-consumptio­n lounge

- ADRIAN CHAMBERLAI­N

Mayor Lisa Helps is unhappy with the opening of a cannabis lounge in Victoria. However, its owner said the new business provides a much-needed service.

Helps said she’s “not OK” with The Green Ceiling, which provides a public place for pot puffing. She said the city is devising regulation­s that might put the kibosh on the enterprise, which opened its doors on April 18.

The Green Ceiling is the first of its kind in the city, said Ashley Abraham, the 28-year-old owner. While it doesn’t sell cannabis, the “vapour lounge” offers a coffee shop-style atmosphere for people wanting to smoke weed publicly.

Patrons, who must be at least 19 years old, pay $5 an hour. In return, they have access to marijuana-smoking accessorie­s such as papers, bongs and vapourizer­s. The Green Ceiling also offers board games and plans to host live music, comedy and art shows.

Abraham applied for a business licence but is still awaiting word from the city. She has met with a lawyer who said such a business is legal. She said she also spoke with a Victoria police community resource officer who told her she’d be breaking no laws by running a cannabis lounge.

Despite a growing public acceptance, Victoria police public affairs officer Const. Matt Rutherford said being in possession of marijuana is still a violation of Canadian law. However, the legality of running a lounge such as The Green Ceiling — which doesn’t sell cannabis — is a grey area.

“If [Abraham] is not in possession, I don’t know what she’d be charged with,” Rutherford said.

Helps said Abraham is in violation of a municipal bylaw if she operates without a business licence. Meanwhile, city staff are compiling a report on the regulation of marijuana-related businesses in Victoria. It’s expected to come before city council this month.

“My understand­ing is that one of the regulation­s is going to be no consumptio­n of cannabis on the spot. We don’t have any regulation­s in place. But as soon as we do, this business won’t meet the guidelines,” Helps said.

Abraham said she opened The Green Ceiling because there’s a need in Victoria for public cannabis-smoking spaces. Many people are not permitted to smoke marijuana in their homes, particular­ly apartments and condominiu­ms. And she said smoking in parks or on the street is inappropri­ate.

“You’re talking about someone who’s using cannabis and now they’re forced into a dark alleyway like a criminal. We need to get away from that,” Abraham said. “This [smoking lounge] is a lot more civilized. It allows people to maintain their dignity.”

Born and raised in Victoria, Abraham used to run a bed-and-breakfast until she was injured in an automobile accident. She then got a job with the Vancouver Island Compassion Society, which provides cannabis for people using it for medical reasons. Abraham said her background in hospitalit­y and cannabis makes her ideally suited to run The Green Ceiling.

The high-ceiling lounge has chandelier­s, orange walls and tiled floors. It’s the former showroom for Gazzola Tile and Design on Quadra Street, which still operates next door. Abraham rents the premises from Gazzola. A sign on the wall forbids cigarettes and “blunt wraps” (joints using tobacco leaf as a wrapper).

 ?? BRUCE STOTESBURY, TIMES COLONIST ?? The Green Ceiling owner Ashley Abraham, left, samples smoke from a bong with a customer at her new cannabis-consumptio­n lounge on Quadra Street.
BRUCE STOTESBURY, TIMES COLONIST The Green Ceiling owner Ashley Abraham, left, samples smoke from a bong with a customer at her new cannabis-consumptio­n lounge on Quadra Street.

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