Pubdate: Wed, 22 Feb 2012
Source: National Post (Canada)
Copyright: 2012 Canwest Publishing Inc.
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/wEtbT4yU
Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286
Author: Kristin Annable

FIRST HEALTH CANADA HELPS PROSECUTE MARIJUANA GROWERS, THEN ASKS THEM 
FOR ADVICE

Montreal'S Centre DE Compassion, a Medical Marijuana Facility, Was 
Raided Last Year and Subsequently Shut Down, Its Director Marc-Boris 
St. Maurice Charged With Trafficking. Yet, Much to His Surprise, 
Health Canada Asked Him for Advice on the Subject of Medical 
Marijuana, Along With Other Black Market Medical Marijuana Growers and 
Dispensers and Members of Health Canada'S Bureau of Medical Marihuana 
Regulatory Reform, at a Meeting in Ottawa Wednesday. They Wanted to 
Know How to Grow, Distribute and Regulate the Drug for Medical 
Purposes. the National Post'S Kristin Annable Spoke to Mr. St. Maurice:

Q: Health Canada had an audience full of people who Ottawa has spent 
years trying to shut up and shut down. With this opportunity, what 
sort of questions did they ask?
A: Well I have the sheet right here, some examples are:
In an indoor installation would you use artificial or natural light?
Should you use hydroponic or natural soil?
What are the minimum requirements, in your opinion, for the person in 
charge of quality?

Q: And how did you answer those questions?
A: In my opinion the most important thing is the proficiency of the 
person, whether it is hydroponic or natural soil. Obviously, I prefer 
indoor because you can control the environment better. I think you 
would need someone with both microbiology experience and someone who 
has experience cultivating.

Q: Usually facilities like yours are at odds with the government. How 
does it feel to have Health Canada come to you looking for help?
A: That is the irony of the situation. Health Canada has come to court 
testifying against myself and other medical marijuana providers many 
times. Yet, now they are coming to us looking for information because 
they know it has value. Some people here have cases pending against 
them; are they going to testify against us after inviting us here?

Q: What were the people like who were there?
A: There were producers from all over the country. I think there was 
at least three from Toronto, some more from Montreal, Halifax, Guelph. 
The crowd was quite diverse, people in suits and ties, people in 
ponytails and leather hats, everyone from lawyers to old hippies.

Q: Over the years you must have developed quite the expertise on the subject.
A: Yes, we have always had to do it illegally. The positive is that 
they are acknowledging our level of expertise, which is a phenomenon.

Q: So how did they extend the invite to you?
A: Last summer, Health Canada announced that they were overhauling the 
whole medical marijuana access regulations and getting rid of personal 
production licenses. We went to a consultation at that time to discuss 
dispensing marijuana, where they announced that they would be giving 
out commercial production licenses to "compassion care" facilities to 
supply and legally produce it.

Q: So they decided that they want it produced commercially for medical use?
A: They said they would have a subsequent meeting to follow-up, which 
was this meeting. This was the first meeting that they have reached 
out to and recognized our expertise on the subject of production.

Q: And how did they conduct the meeting?
A: It was in a hotel conference room. We were broken up into three 
groups to discuss three themes: Quality, record keeping and security.

Q: Do you think the government understands what they are doing when it 
comes to growing marijuana?
A: No I don't think they do. After 10 years of this, they are 
realizing that what we do is complex.

Q: What were the bigger concerns raised at this consultation?
A: Security. One thing they were asking was whether they should do 
criminal background checks for the producers. I'm of the opinion it 
would be wrong to exclude people who have a record of marijuana 
production, because they have the experience. It'd be like having a 
gay rights club and only letting straight people in.
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.