Pubdate: Tue, 06 Feb 2018 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2018 The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Mike Hager Page: A8 RECREATIONAL CANNABIS WILL MIRROR ALCOHOL MODEL, GOVERNMENT SAYS Province's system heeds advice of public-health experts, but substances won't be sold together in single outlet British Columbia will create a retail system for recreational cannabis that is almost identical to the one for alcohol, but like most other provinces, will not allow the two substances to be sold together in private or public stores once Ottawa legalizes marijuana this summer. Solicitor-General Mike Farnworth released more details for the province's legal cannabis framework on Monday. He noted that his NDP government heeded the advice of the country's top public health experts to ban the sales of cannabis next to alcohol. The province's biggest public unions had pushed for co-location, which only Nova Scotia and the Northwest Territories have approved. However, it will be legal in some rural areas, just as the province now allows alcohol to be sold next to tobacco in special cases, he added. As is the case with alcohol, municipalities will have the final word on if and where they want cannabis sold, with the provincial Liquor Control and Licensing Branch in charge of licensing cannabis retailers and making sure they comply with the law. "It's going to take some time before we get the entire retail system up and running," he said. "We fully anticipate all levels of government will need to continue to assess and refine cannabis policy and regulation in the months and years to come." He said the province is creating an online sales portal and the first standalone government store is expected to be selling product by "late summer," which is unlikely to coincide with Ottawa's promise to end prohibition in July. To hasten the licensing process, the provincial liquor agency will allow applicants to start registering for a retail licence this spring, he said. Those now operating illegal dispensaries, more than a hundred of which exist across the province, will be allowed to apply for a licence, as will those with criminal records for drug offences and other "low risk" activities. But entry into the legal sector will be granted on a case-by-case basis and those with ties to organized crime or gangs won't be allowed in, Mr. Farnworth said. Commercial producers now licensed by Ottawa to grow medical cannabis won't be allowed to open their own stores - as in Alberta - and entrepreneurs will be prohibited from selling any products from producers to which they are linked. As well, the provincial agency will have to approve the commercial name of each store, with the words dispensary, apothecary or pharmacy outlawed because they blur the line between recreational and medical cannabis. The B.C. government announced in December that 19 would be the minimum age to possess up to 30 grams. On Monday, Mr. Farnworth announced more rules, including allowing people to smoke cannabis in public places where tobacco smoking and vaping are permitted, although it will be banned in vehicles and in areas frequented by children, including beaches, parks and playgrounds. Provincial rules for marijuana cultivation will align with the federal government's proposal, allowing adults to grow up to four plants per household, but landlords are allowed to prohibit cultivation and use by tenants. The B.C. government will also create a 90-day driving ban for those caught drug-impaired while driving, and it will increase training for law enforcement officers to recognize impairment. The Responsible Marijuana Retail Alliance of BC, an initiative of the union representing public liquor store workers and an association representing private liquor outlets, said it was disappointed that the government rejected its proposal to sell cannabis in liquor stores. Mike Morris, the public safety critic for the provincial Liberal Party and former solicitor-general, said the NDP government is dithering in making actual decisions and has only released part of its plan. - - With a report from Reuters - --- MAP posted-by: Matt