Pubdate: Fri, 04 Oct 2002
Source: New Westminster Newsleader (CN BC)
Copyright: 2002 New Westminster Newsleader
Contact:  http://www.newwestnewsleader.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1297
Author: Wanda Chow
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada)

ANSWERS SOUGHT ON LEGAL GROW-OP

New Westminster police and city hall want answers to a multitude of 
questions now that a licensed marijuana grow operation has been established 
in Queensborough.

The grow-op is located on Boyne Street and its owners are licensed by 
Health Canada to possess and cultivate marijuana for medicinal use.

Organized by the Merlin Project, which seeks to make the drug readily 
available for such purposes, the Queensborough operation was the site of a 
news conference held for some local media last Monday. They explained that 
the drug is processed into concentrated pellets of THC, or 
tetrahydrocannabinol, the active ingredient in the plant, which can be 
injested instead of smoked.

New Westminster police Staff Sgt. Casey Dehaas said there are concerns over 
the operation's impact on the community and on drug-related police 
investigations.

Police want to know whether the grow-operations, which typically require a 
lot of electricity to run, have been set up safely.

And, he asked, how secure is it from people who might want to steal the crop?

But perhaps most disconcerting for police is the licenced operations' 
effect on police investigations. Dehaas said judges could turn down 
applications for search warrants if police cannot determine whether the 
suspected grow-operations are licensed or not. Information on licensees is 
protected by privacy laws. "This could very well jeopardize us getting 
search warrants."

If information on the licensed operations is deemed private, who is going 
to monitor them and make sure the operators are not simply selling or 
giving away the crop. "Where's the control?" Mayor Helen Sparkes said it's 
hoped staff will have some answers by Monday's council meeting. She said 
she doesn't have a problem with marijuana being used for medicinal 
purposes, but always expected it would be cultivated in an industrial 
setting and not in a house in a residential neighbourhood.

"Other medicines are highly scrutinized and inspected. This one is just 
kind of out there." Gavin Palmer, president of the Queensborough Residents' 
Association, called the lack of consultation another example of the 
different levels of governments not working together. Told of the licensed 
grow-operation, the association's executive was most concerned about the 
safety and security issues.

Andrew Swift, spokesperson for Health Canada, stressed that the licenses 
only exempt licensees from the laws around possession and cultivation of 
marijuana. "It doesn't exclude them from all laws.

"If there is a no-smoking bylaw, [licensees] would still be subject to that."

Health Canada's only role is to grant the license, Swift said from Ottawa. 
It does not monitor licensees. If they are selling or giving away what they 
produce to people who don't have licenses to possess it, that would be 
considered drug trafficking, and thus, a policing issue, he said. The 
licenses are granted to people only for medical purposes and only for their 
own use. Applications must be supported by documentation from doctors 
showing all other methods of treatment have been tried and are considered 
inappropriate or not suitable. "This is a situation of last resort for 
people," Swift said.

The location of the grow-op must be specified on the license which is only 
valid for a maximum of 12 months. After that, people must reapply, in case 
new medical treatments become available so the marijuana is no longer 
needed, Swift said.

The licensing program started in 1999. About 817 people across Canada are 
now licensed to possess marijuana with the majority also licensed to 
cultivate it for their own use. Licensees can also designate others to 
cultivate it for them if their living situation doesn't permit them to grow 
it on their own.
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MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager