Toronto Star

City preparing for pot shop crackdown

Numbers will explode if left unaddresse­d, mayor fears

- BETSY POWELL AND JENNIFER PAGLIARO CITY HALL BUREAU

City and law enforcemen­t officials are in the midst of a wide-scale investigat­ion into the dozens of unlicensed marijuana outlets that have exploded around Toronto.

“Once we have the evidence we need we will be going forward and laying charges through the courts and serving them with the appropriat­e summonses,” said Mark Sraga, director of investigat­ions with municipal licensing and standards.

That could include Toronto police charging operators with drug traffickin­g, Sraga said.

The pot entreprene­urs could also be hit with operating without a business licence or contraveni­ng zoning bylaws. The latter carries a maxi- mum penalty of $50,000 for a corporatio­n and $25,000 for an individual.

“The fashion in which they’re operating, they know they’re outside the law,” said Sraga. On Thursday, Mayor John Tory sent a letter to Tracey Cook, licensing’s executive director, asking her to direct staff to explore ways of regulating these businesses.

Vancouver and Victoria have introduced licensing fees and regulation­s that control pot shops’ proximity to schools, community centres and other dispensari­es.

Tory also asked Cook to work with the police to use whatever enforcemen­t mechanisms are available.

“We just can’t have allegedly medical marijuana dispensari­es popping up on every street corner, in a completely unregulate­d manner,” he said.

Medical marijuana is currently only legally available for those with a prescripti­on. They receive ship- ments in the mail from Health Canada-approved producers.

The federal government plans to legalize possession of pot for recreation­al use, although there is no firm timetable. The mayor expressed skepticism that the proliferat­ion of pot shops here is due to “a massive increase in the number of bona fide prescripti­ons being issued.”

In his letter, Tory said the “speed with which these storefront­s are proliferat­ing and the concentrat­ion of dispensari­es in some areas of our city is alarming.”

Sraga said officials are also worried about the ingredient­s contained in edible marijuana products that many outlets are selling. “There is a health and safety concern where people are perhaps purchasing and ingesting products that they have no way of knowing the quality of what they are in fact consuming.”

Sraga expects to announce results of the investigat­ion in two weeks.

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