Pubdate: Sat, 10 Oct 2015
Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC)
Copyright: 2015 Times Colonist
Contact: http://www2.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html
Website: http://www.timescolonist.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481
Author: Jack Knox
Page: A3

HARD TO DEFINE, HARDER TO CALL

Be honest: Four years ago, could you have envisioned the Conservatives
on the same side of the law as an industrial-scale marijuana grow-op?

But weird as it seems, that's the situation in Nanaimo, where
medical-marijuana producer Tilray finds itself on the establishment
side of the pot debate.

With $3.2 million in annual payroll, Tilray became one of the bigger
employers in town when it opened in 2014. This spring, it announced
plans to quadruple the size of its 65,000-square-foot Duke Point
production facility, adding 275 jobs.

Then came June and word that the company was laying off 61 people. The
plant now employs 130. Company vice-president Philippe Lucas, the
former Victoria city councillor, says Tilray still plans to expand -
just not right now.

The reason for the setback - or at least one example of it - can be
found in the heart of Nanaimo. Right near the intersection of Church
and Chapel sits Island Releaf, a bright and airy pot shop that, having
just opened in August, still has that new-car smell.

"There's probably nine other dispensaries in town," says owner Sheina
Criss, standing behind a display of marijuana salves and capsules.
Vancouver has another 100 shops, Victoria close to 20. And they're all
taking market share.

Tilray operates within Health Canada rules that say medical marijuana
users may buy only from large-scale licensed producers that ship their
product by mail. Alas for Tilray and Canada's two dozen other licensed
growers, perceived foot-dragging by Ottawa after a series of court
defeats - it was ruled the feds weren't doing enough to make medical
marijuana available - created a legal void filled in the past year by
cheaper, buy-your-pot-on-the-spot shops operating outside the Health
Canada system.

This is particularly true on the West Coast where, with recreational
marijuana use now legal in Alaska, Washington and Oregon, the
prevailing opinion seems to be that Ottawa is out of step, pot
prohibition has been a failure, so we might as well accept reality and
get on with regulation instead - except what we have right now looks
more like the Wild West.

Not that pot laws are anywhere near the top of the list of election
issues here.

In fact, the diversity of the place makes it impossible to seize one
issue and say: "This, this is what matters to Nanaimo." Too many
different people living too many realities for that.

Tilray's presence is an indicator of that diversity, a reminder that
the resource sector doesn't define Nanaimo's character as it once did.
It's a place of California retirees, university boffins (including
Thomas Mulcair's sister), truck loggers, health workers, marine
scientists (whose tongues were surgically removed by the prime
minister's office), many, many shopping malls and a historic downtown
whose book-stored-and-cafed main drag took first place in a national
Great Streets contest. Nanaimo is hard to pigeon-hole.

With a population of 84,000, it has passed the city of Victoria to
become the second-largest municipality on Vancouver Island, behind
Saanich. It also has most of the 115,000 people in the new riding of
Nanaimo-Ladysmith.

"We've got businesses that you don't even know about," Mayor Bill
McKay says. Take Seamor Marine, maker of remotely operated vehicles
that poke around shipwrecks. Take all those companies based, like
Tilray, in the Tonka Toys for Big Boys sprawl of the Duke Point
industrial area.

Forestry is still a big dog, though. Hundreds of city residents have
what McKay calls "lunchbucket" jobs that take them into the woods each
day. Tilray backs onto the Harmac pulp mill property, where 340 work
full time; the Little Success Story That Could keeps ticking along
seven years after being saved from extinction by local investors,
including its own employees. Island Timberlands is just past Harmac.
Down the road, Western Forest Products has begun a $28-million upgrade
of its sawmill.

But WFP also closed its downtown Nanaimo sawmill for good in December.
The site dominates the view from one side of the new Nanaimo Port
Authority offices, as though to reinforce the point that the industry
isn't what it once was.

"The Nanaimo Port Authority has been a forest products distribution
centre for the past 50 years," CEO Bernie Dumas says. The reality,
though, is that it exported a quarter as much lumber in 2014 as in
1996.

Hence the port's push for, again, diversity. It increased its
flexibility in June with the arrival at Duke Point of a
Brazilian-built crane capable of lifting 104-tonne loads and dropping
them on giant post-Panamax ships. That's a step up from the existing
gantry crane and its 40-tonne capacity.

"We see ourselves as the freight gateway for Vancouver Island," Dumas
says. The authority wants to entice big outlets like Walmart and
Costco to ship goods from Asia directly to Nanaimo, instead of
unloading on the mainland and serving the Island by truck from
distribution centres there. It also sees a future in the break-bulk
sector - unloading, storing, then barging off industrial pieces too
large to ship in containers, such as the tens of thousands of
Asian-built components for B.C.'s planned LNG plants. (An example of
this was when the Cape Scott Wind Farm's 55 giant windmills arrived in
their disassembled state - Ikea furniture for engineers.)

The port authority is also pushing short-sea shipping, using barges,
not trucks, to move everything from lumber to Fanny Bay's Natural
Glacial Waters to the mainland. Meanwhile, Westwood Shipping has begun
monthly service direct to Japan and Korea. The just-announced Trans
Pacific Partnership could hold promise.

A new cruise ship terminal has modest goals, 20 to 25 ships a year;
eight are on next year's schedule.

Nanaimo's diffuse character, the variety of perspectives among voters,
makes election forecasting a bit of a mug's game. Prior to
redistribution, the city was split between two ridings, one
represented by James Lunney, who ran as a Conservative, and the other
by New Democrat Jean Crowder, neither of whom is running again.

Contesting the seat are former Islands Trust chairwoman Sheila
Malcolmson for the NDP; real estate agent Tim Tessier for the
Liberals; Jack East for the Marxist-Leninists; and filmmaker Paul
Manly - the son of Jim Manly, who represented the riding as a New
Democrat in the 1980s - for the Greens.

The selection of Conservative candidate Mark MacDonald surprised some;
in 2013 he was managing editor of the Nanaimo Daily News during an
uproar over the publication of letters to the editor deemed deeply
hurtful by local aboriginals.

"They were very upset by the letters and subsequent statements that
Mr. MacDonald made," says city councillor Diane Brennan. But in a
constituency of divided constituencies, will that affect the election
outcome?

Transposing the results of the 2011 election on the new boundaries
shows 45 per cent of the vote would have gone to the NDP and 40 to the
Conservatives, but the Greens are making a big push this time. Who
knows what that means? Reading the tea leaves isn't easy, not in
politics, not in the economy. As Brennan notes: "I don't expect that
any of us suspected even five years ago that there would be marijuana
production."

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[sidebar]

THE RIDING

Nanaimo-Ladysmith is a new riding for 2015. It contains areas that
used to be part of Nanaimo-Cowichan and Nanaimo-Alberni, and puts the
city of Nanaimo into a single riding. Municipalities in the riding
include Nanaimo, Ladysmith, Lantzville and parts of the Cowichan Valley.

Size: 1,753 square kilometres Population (2011 census): 114,998

Electors on list (preliminary): 91,240

Nanaimo-Alberni MP: James Lunney, (elected as Conservative, now
Independent; not running for reelection) Nanaimo-Cowichan MP:

Jean Crowder, NDP (not running again)

In the past

* In Nanaimo-Alberni in 2011, the Conservatives got 46 per cent of the
vote, while the NDP got 38.

* In Nanaimo-Cowichan in 2011, the NDP got 49 per cent of the vote,
while the Conservatives got 38.

* If everyone in Nanaimo-Ladysmith voted as they did in 2011, the NDP
would get 45 per cent of the vote, while the Conservatives would get
40.

THE CANDIDATES

Jack East, Marxist-Leninist Retired railway worker Party website:
mlpc.ca

Mark MacDonald, Conservative Owner and founder, Invest Northwest 
Publishing Ltd. markmacdonald.ca Website: Facebook: 
facebook.com/markmacdonaldnanaimo Twitter: twitter.com/markmacdonald30

Sheila Malcolmson, NDP Former Islands Trust chairwoman Website: 
sheilamalcolmson.ndp.ca Facebook: facebook.com/SheilaMalcolmsonNDP 
Twitter: twitter.com/s_malcolmson

Paul Manly, Green Filmmaker, communications specialist Website: 
paulmanly.greenparty.ca Facebook: facebook.com/VoteforPaulManly Twitter: 
twitter.com/paulmanly

Tim Tessier, Liberal Small business owner, former business development 
consultant nationally Website: timtessier.liberal.ca Facebook: 
facebook.com/timtessierliberal Twitter: twitter.com/TimTessier2015
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MAP posted-by: Matt