Vancouver begins crackdown on unlicensed medical marijuana businesses

By Gemma Karstens-Smith, The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER – The City of Vancouver has begun cracking down on unlicensed medical marijuana shops, but owners say they’re still committed to keeping their doors open.

Prominent pot activist Jodie Emery said at least two dispensaries were issued $250 fines Saturday, the first day inspectors enforced regulations that the city put into place last year.

“But the two places I’ve spoken with are open for business. They’re not going to deny accessibility to their patients,” Emery said.

The rules were developed when medical marijuana businesses began growing across Vancouver, but the city refused to grant permits to 140 dispensaries that didn’t comply with rules such as being too close to schools.

Seven businesses have been issued development permits under the city’s regulations and 13 applications are being reviewed.

Andreea Toma, the city’s chief licensing inspector, said last week that shops that haven’t been granted a business license must pay $250 for every day they remain open and the city could also pursue court action, including a $10,000 fine or an injunction order forcing stores to close.

B.C. Pain Society owner Chuck Varabioff has been outspoken about plans to keep his Commercial Drive store open and said he expected to see enforcement officers there on Saturday.

By mid-afternoon, he still hadn’t been visited, but said he was ready when inspectors do come calling.

“If they come in with a fine and a ticket, and I have to sign the ticket, and accept it, I will, and then I’ll decide later how and when and if I’m going to pay it,” he said.

Varabioff said his permit was denied because his shop is too close to a school, though a long-time compassion club that is located even closer to the school was granted permission to stay open.

He said he wants a fair appeal, and until he gets it, his store will stay open.

Varabioff said he isn’t against regulating medical marijuana businesses, but wants the city to play fair.

“The city was going forward in a positive way,” he said. “But now that they’ve cut it back to just a few dispensaries, they’ve taken one big step backwards.”

The city needs to justify the rules that have been put into place, said Emery.

“Dispensaries want to be legal, but when the regulations are so prohibitive as to force them to close down, that needs to be explained and justified,” she said.

Right now, she said, the rules seem arbitrary and enforcing them is costly, between paying bylaw officers and fighting the legal fights that she predicts will come up when shops refuse to pay the fines.

“This is going to cause more harm than good,” Emery said. “This is going to force thousands of people to loose their accessibility to medicine, it’s going to cost thousands of people their jobs in dispensaries and related businesses, and landlords are going to have empty store fronts once again.”

A spokesman for the City of Vancouver declined to comment on the enforcement measures and said more information would be provided on Monday.

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