B.C. government to introduce cannabis legislation this week but no news on store locations

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
Minister responsible says last year's election main reason why B.C. is behind other provinces



Solicitor General Mike Farnworth announces a public engagement process for the regulation of marijuana in British Columbia on Sept. 25, 2017 (Justin McElroy/CBC)
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Expect some long-awaited details from the province this week on how marijuana will be regulated when it becomes legal in July.

Just not how much things will cost or where public stores will be.

Solicitor General Mike Farnworth has told CBC News legislation will likely be brought in Thursday to give a policy framework for government rules, first outlined in February, around non-medicinal cannabis.

Those include setting the legal age at 19, allowing adults to possess up to 30 grams of non-medicinal cannabis at a time, stiff penalties for adults driving while impaired, bans on smoking in beaches, parks and playgrounds and veto power to municipalities on applications for any retail licence.

However, rules on pricing, along with locations for the public standalone stores operated by the Liquor Distribution Branch, will not be revealed.

"I've been clear, right from the beginning, you're not going to see whole piles of stores up and running right away. It will be ramping up. We will be working with local governments, because they're the ones that have to implement it," said Farnworth.

A spokesperson for the ministry said both an e-commerce platform for online purchase across the province and the first government-operated retail store should be up and running by the summer.

Behind other provinces
Despite B.C.'s extensive cannabis industry, it's behind other provinces in starting the process for licensing and distribution.

Quebec announced the location of its first four pot stores on Monday and Ontario did the sameearlier this month, while the City of Calgary received over 220 applications for licences on Wednesday.

"I would have thought B.C. would have been leading in this area, not lagging behind every other province in this country. I think we're the last to table legislation and that is unfortunate, because we should be leaders on this issue," said Kirk Tousaw, a lawyer specializing in cannabis laws.

He's not overly concerned about not knowing where the government will put its stores, but worries about the short window private dispensaries could have to apply for licences and comply with new regulations.

"How do you apply? Who can apply? How easy is it for these existing dispensaries to transition to legality and is there going to be some kind of grace period where these organizations will be able to continue servicing their members?"

Farnworth said part of the reason for the delay was because of their commitment to work with municipalities — but also the fact they were a new government.

"We had an election year, and, as a result, we weren't able to get working on this file. Instead, we were sworn in in July," he said.
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
KirkTousaw‏Verified account@KirkTousaw
So in Calgary alone there are 225 cannabis store applicants (1 per 5,300 people). In Vancouver there are more than 100 stores operating now (1 per 6300). In Quebec and Ontario combined the government plans to open 45 or about 1 store per 350,000 people. Yeah, that’ll work.
 

gwheels

Well-Known Member
Ontarios stores are fucked but who would do that. Grow your own. This is a grow forum after all. If you smoke a little get a 2 x 2 to 2 x 4 tent and run 2 to 4 plants with a timber 2vl or 3vl and beat them at their game. Total cost of gear under 1000 which is about 100 grams at the ontario bend you over level

EDIT....shit its outdoor season grab some autos of strength and a couple of photos with short flower times (sour kush, most kush, white rhino are my favorites) and plant them outside. Fuck the man.
 
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gb123

Well-Known Member
B.C. set to introduce pot laws, but years of fine tuning likely, says minister


ICTORIA _ British Columbia’s solicitor general says the province’s pending recreational marijuana legislation will be more evolutionary than set in stone.

Mike Farnworth says additional government regulations, expected to be introduced Thursday, will form a framework that will require ongoing fine tuning as the country adapts to legalized pot this summer.

The B.C. government has already announced that marijuana sales will be allowed through both public and private stores to buyers who are at least 19 years old.

Retailers will be prohibited from selling marijuana in stores that also sell alcohol and cigarettes.




Farnworth says the upcoming legislation he introduces will not include a definitive pricing policy.

B.C. is one of the last provinces in Canada to table its recreational marijuana legislation.

 

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
https://globalnews.ca/news/4170161/b-c-government-legislation-marijuana-legalization/
B.C. Government introduces new legislation to deal with marijuana legalization

The B.C. government is proposing new rules that would make 19 the minimum age to purchase, sell or consume cannabis, allow adults to possess up to 30 grams of cannabis in a public place and prohibit cannabis smoking and vaping everywhere tobacco smoking and vaping are prohibited.

If passed, the new legislation would also ban the smoking or vaping of recreational marijuana at playgrounds, sports fields and other places where children commonly gather.

READ MORE: Government plans to legalize pot are on track for ‘end of summer’

The new legislation has been introduced on Thursday as the province prepares to deal with the new world of legalized recreational marijuana in Canada. The federal government originally set the deadline for July 1, but that has now been moved back to a later date.

“The legislation introduced today provides a sound foundation for the regulation and safe implementation of legalized cannabis in British Columbia,” said Mike Farnworth, Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General. “This marks a major milestone, and puts our province in position to not only be ready for federal cannabis legalization in late summer, but does so in a way that reflects the province’s goals for legalized cannabis that prioritize public health and safety, particularly for our children and youth.”

WATCH HERE: B.C. government outlines framework around legal marijuana

The government formally introduced three pieces of legislation to deal with the major change. The Cannabis Control and Licensing Act gives the province exclusive rights over wholesale distribution of cannabis and provide the authority for public retails sales. British Columbia has decided not to allow the sale of recreational pot in liquor stores, rather the drug will be sold an stand-alone stores that are both government or privately owned.

READ MORE: Public cannabis stores in B.C. to operate under retail brand ‘BC Cannabis Stores’

The province has also announced non-medical cannabis will be sold at government stores called BC Cannabis Stores.

READ MORE: Will the government’s plan to legalize pot go up in smoke in the Senate?

The government has also introduced amendments to the Motor Vehicle Act that will address drug affected driving in B.C. The new rules include a 90-day driving prohibition for any driver who police reasonably believe operated a motor vehicle affected by a drug or by a combination of drug or alcohol. Authorities will be able to hand out the prohibition based on “analysis of a bodily substance or an evaluation by a specially trained police drug recognition expert.”

New drivers in the Graduated Licensing Program will be subject to a zero-tolerance restriction of the presence of THC, the active ingredient in cannabis.

“As I’ve said before, the date set by the federal government for cannabis legalization will just be the beginning. B.C. will monitor implementation and make any necessary adjustments to provincial regulations to ensure our provincial goals are being met,” said Farnworth.

Breaking any of the rules create in the legislation would carry with it a fine ranging from $2,000 to $100,000, imprisonment of three to 12 months or a combination of both.

READ MORE: Stick with your dealer? Or buy pot legally? How legalization will affect the black market

Adults will be allowed to grow up to four cannabis plants per household. The plants must not be visible from public spaces off the property, and home cultivation will be banned in homes used as day cares. The province’s Residential Tenancy Act bans cannabis smoking under existing leases that prohibit smoking tobacco and prohibit the personal cultivation of cannabis under existing leases, except for federally authorized medical cannabis.

The consumption and sale of recreational marijuana will still be illegal, even if this legislation passes, until the federal government makes it legal.
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
Can you say 'business as usual' lol. Even the government is admitting the black market is so entrenched in BC that they don't know how many people they can sway away to the legal stores. lol
YES... same ole same ole lol

Regulators mount up: B.C. vows to crack down on illegal #cannabis dispensaries with help from government unit
 
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