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Cannabis use a health issue, not a business one, mayor says

Lounges that permit people to use cannabis on site will continue to be high-priority enforcement areas under city regulations, says Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps.
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A vendor trims marijuana with scissors. Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps says lounges that permit people to use cannabis on site will continue to be high-priority enforcement areas under city regulations.

 

Lounges that permit people to use cannabis on site will continue to be high-priority enforcement areas under city regulations, says Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps.

“I think we do need a place for the safe consumption of cannabis and I hope that the federal government and the provincial government will create that in their regulatory regime,” Helps said Thursday during discussion of enforcement efforts. “But right now, it’s not part of our business licence process and nor do I think it should be.

“I think that consumption is a health issue. It’s not a business issue and it shouldn’t be privatized,” she said.

Consumption on premises is not permitted under the city cannabis regulation bylaw. In the past nine months the city has levied $4,000 in fines for allowing consumption on site, city clerk Chris Coates said.

The smoking lounges, along with four retailers who have not applied for rezoning and business licensing, are the city’s highest priority for enforcement, Coates said. Applications for court injunctions with the B.C. Supreme Court against operators that continue to flout regulations are being finalized.

Helps said the city “has really taken a risk and has been progressive” with its efforts to regulate cannabis sales in advance of federal regulations, so those who are not following the city’s rules “should be enforced against.”

In an interview, Helps said there’s no question that consumption regulation is a matter for senior governments. “Safe consumption services, A) are not a business and B) it’s a health issue.” Like safe consumption sites for injection drug use, it’s an issue for the Ministry of Health, she said.

“All of those things — the regulation of edibles, the regulation of consumption, the access to consumption — all of that is not a zoning issue, and it’s definitely not a business licence issue.”

In total, more than $20,000 worth of fines have been levied in connection with the city’s new cannabis regulations, Coates said in his report, including:

• 15 $1,000 fines for operating without a licence

• eight $500 fines for allowing consumption

• one $250 fine for displaying prohibited signs

• one $500 fine for failing to maintain air filtration

• one $250 fine for operating outside of permitted hours

• one $500 fine for failure to provide required staff

In his report to councillors, Coates said enforcement has been proactive, initially focusing on education of the operators about the regulations and helping them navigate the rezoning process.

Only four of the 35 cannabis dispensaries operating in the city have not applied for rezoning or a business licence. They are: Absolute Medicinal, 2520 Turner St.; Beard Brothers Society, 849 Fort St.; Cleanleaf Dispensary, 1056 North Park St.; and Nature’s Botanicals, 1011 Johnson St.

Coates said that enforcement of the cannabis regulations is taking a bigger toll than expected and exceeding the estimated 35 hours a week of staff time.

Helps said she’s considering introducing an amendment to the city’s bylaw that would prohibit the sale of cannabis to persons under the age of 25, but first wants to do more research.

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