Vancouver Sun

■ POT SHOPS’ FUTURE CLOUDY,

- LAURA KANE

Cannabis connoisseu­rs in Vancouver have been able to buy potent weed over the counter for years, but ironically, that could change when marijuana becomes legal.

None of the long-standing pot shops in the city have received provincial licences to operate, with only a week left until legalizati­on.

Jessika Villano, owner of Buddha Barn Craft Cannabis, said she applied for a licence one week after the applicatio­n portal opened in August and doesn’t expect approval before Oct. 17.

“Of course, everybody ’s nervous. We’re doing everything that we can to comply with all three levels of government,” she said.

“We’re still nervous. We still haven’t received that golden ticket.”

Vancouver became a haven for illegal pot shops after the city — in an effort to ensure access for medical marijuana patients — decided not to police the stores unless there were public safety concerns, such as gang affiliatio­ns or sales to minors.

By 2015, more than 100 dispensari­es had sprung up, prompting council to pass a bylaw requiring shops to obtain a developmen­t permit, a $30,000 business licence and obey location rules. So-called compassion clubs — non-profits that provide medical pot to patients in need — paid only $1,000 for a licence.

The business licence scheme didn’t change the fact that selling cannabis across the counter was illegal in Canada.

It did, however, allow the city to keep track of stores and issue tickets to those that flouted its rules, with limited success.

Today, there are 19 pot shops operating with a municipal business licence in Vancouver, including four compassion clubs, while 53 locations hold a developmen­t permit. Dozens of others have flouted the bylaw, prompting the city to launch a court case in which a decision has not yet been issued.

Regardless, the entire system changes on Oct. 17 and — if the law is enforced — Vancouver could go from being Canada’s most potfriendl­y city to one of its least.

In July, the city updated its bylaw to align with legalizati­on. Any dispensary with a previously issued business or compassion club licence must apply for a provincial retail licence and a new municipal business licence.

As part of the process to obtain a provincial licence, B.C. forwards the applicatio­n to the city for recommenda­tion of approval. Once the provincial licence is granted, the city contacts the operator to apply for a new municipal business licence.

“To date, the city has received four applicatio­ns from the province,” chief licence inspector Kathryn Holm said. “To date, no operator in Vancouver has been issued a provincial or municipal cannabis business licence to operate legally as of Oct. 17.”

British Columbia has said the only government-run cannabis store ready on Oct. 17 will be in Kamloops. There will also be an online store. But it’s unclear whether any private brick-andmortar stores will be approved by that date.

A spokesman for the attorney general’s office refused to say how many applicatio­ns had been forwarded to cities for approval, citing “private business informatio­n” between applicants and the province.

Some Vancouver dispensari­es plan to stay open regardless of whether their provincial licence applicatio­ns are approved.

Don Briere, owner of four Weeds Glass and Gifts stores, said his customers include cancer patients and people with severe pain. Closing his doors would force them onto opioids or into the black market, hesaid.

“Can you imagine the airport — you would be parking planes on the freeway — and the lines to get into Kamloops ... if every person who consumed cannabis had to go to Kamloops?”

All of the existing pot shops in Vancouver are ostensibly medical cannabis dispensari­es. While some require proof of a health condition, others — including Briere’s stores — sell to any adult who wants weed for any reason.

The province has created only a non-medical retail licence, requiring genuine medical dispensari­es to become recreation­al retailers if they want to survive. Compassion clubs that previously paid $1,000 for a city licence won’t be allowed to sell pot unless they obtain a provincial licence and a $30,000 municipal business licence.

Villano’s store used to be called Buddha Barn Medicinal Society but is rebranding as Buddha Barn Craft Cannabis to comply with provincial rules that don’t allow retailers to use medical language.

Can you imagine the … lines to get into Kamloops ... if every person who consumed cannabis had to go to Kamloops?

DON BRIERE, Weeds Glass and Gifts

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? “We’re doing everything that we can to comply with all three levels of government,” says Jessika Villano, owner of Buddha Barn Craft Cannabis.
JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS “We’re doing everything that we can to comply with all three levels of government,” says Jessika Villano, owner of Buddha Barn Craft Cannabis.

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