Vancouver Sun

Metro on high alert over pungent pot odour

Metro Vancouver board members expect even more after marijuana is legalized

- JENNIFER SALTMAN jensaltman@postmedia.com

Metro Vancouver’s municipal leaders are bracing for a significan­t increase in odour complaints when marijuana is legalized this fall.

This follows a sudden spike in the number of complaints the regional district has received involving a legal commercial cannabis grow operation that recently started up in Langley.

“Here we have a new industry that’s in its infancy in terms of being legal, and now it’s out in the open and it needs to be dealt with like any other industry. They ’re not going away,” said Langley Mayor Jack Froese.

Between Jan. 1, 2015, and July 31, 2018, Metro Vancouver, which regulates air quality in the region, received 250 complaints related to cannabis, all of which mentioned odour, in addition to other concerns such as light pollution, contaminan­ts leaching into the ground, and particulat­e or chemical mists being used to trap odour.

The vast majority of the complaints (225) were lodged during the first seven months of 2018, and all but five from this year were linked to the B.C. Tweed greenhouse facility in Langley.

The business is a partnershi­p between Sun-Select Produce and Ontario-based Canopy Growth Corp., which have also partnered on a greenhouse in east Delta.

Kathy Preston, the air-quality regulatory lead in Metro Vancouver’s environmen­tal regulation and enforcemen­t division, said B.C. Tweed is aware of the complaints, and they have been forwarded to Health Canada. She said Metro is working with the facility to bring them into compliance with Metro’s bylaws. New federal regulation­s permit cannabis to be grown in greenhouse­s and outdoors, not only in secure indoor facilities.

The province has dictated that cannabis will be considered an agricultur­al crop, and legislatio­n protects farmers from liability when it comes to nuisance odours, noises, dust and other disturbanc­es from normal farming practices.

Even though they have limited powers, regional districts and municipali­ties are caught in the middle, trying to deal with odour, light and noise issues that affect quality of life for their residents.

Members of Metro Vancouver’s board of directors say odour complaints will increase once cannabis is legal and more businesses start legal grow operations.

Pitt Meadows Mayor John Becker said he finds it “completely unacceptab­le” that cannabis will be considered an agricultur­al crop and managed as such.

“Our community faces the real prospect of having much of our urban core, depending on the prevailing winds, inundated with the smell of cannabis,” Becker said.

“I have no philosophi­cal bias against cannabis. I support the notion of decriminal­ization. However, it is not appropriat­e for the vast majority of our residents to be put at risk of having their livability degraded because of the province’s desire to encourage cannabis production.”

He said his concerns are shared by other Metro communitie­s that have a high percentage of farmland.

Delta Mayor Lois Jackson said there is a “very distinct odour of marijuana” in the vicinity of the B.C. Tweed facility in east Delta, but although people have noticed the smell, there have not been many formal complaints. She attributes that to the fact that it is in an agricultur­al area.

“If you were to put a grow op closer to the urban area, the fringe, then we would certainly have some problems,” Jackson said, pointing out that it is a possibilit­y when legalizati­on happens.

She said checks and balances in terms of how to mitigate odour, light and noise concerns need to be in place and clear to proponents before facilities are built or converted.

“I really feel we should be looking at this all at the front end,” she said. “It’s so easy for senior levels of government to put something in place, and by the time it rifles down to the local levels of government it’s hard to fix.”

Froese said the township has been trying to prepare for legalizati­on, but it was difficult before the regulation­s were released. He believes legalizati­on is taking place too quickly.

“There are a lot of unknowns,” Froese said. “As municipali­ties we don’t have very much regulatory authority to deal with it. We’re kind of caught in the middle.”

Last month, Langley and Pitt Meadows passed council resolution­s asking the premier and minister of agricultur­e for a moratorium on cannabis production on agricultur­al land until such time as Victoria consults with farmers, municipal government­s, industry and the public.

A resolution from Delta asking for restrictio­ns or a prohibitio­n related to use of agricultur­al reserve land for cannabis cultivatio­n will also be discussed at the Union of B.C. Municipali­ties annual conference next month.

The Fraser Valley Regional District has received calls about odour from cannabis operations in the past, but it does not keep data about those calls. The district does not have regulatory authority over odour issues in its communitie­s. Complaints from its six municipali­ties are handled by those municipali­ties.

 ?? FRANCIS GEORGIAN ?? Metro Vancouver directors are concerned about a rise in odour complaints tied to marijuana grow operations. Most complaints lodged this year stem from the B.C. Tweed greenhouse facility in Langley.
FRANCIS GEORGIAN Metro Vancouver directors are concerned about a rise in odour complaints tied to marijuana grow operations. Most complaints lodged this year stem from the B.C. Tweed greenhouse facility in Langley.

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