Bright lights from legal Langley grow-op disruptive, say residents

gb123

Well-Known Member
lol

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Residents near a recently-licensed legal marijuana grow-op in Langley are complaining that the bright lights coming from the facility are disruptive.

The greenhouses used to grow bell peppers until recently. But on Feb. 16, a joint venture between Canopy Growth and BC Tweed received its licence to convert the sprawling 30-acre facility to grow marijuana.

It's being touted by operators as the largest licensed cannabis production facility in the world. The companies shipped in more than 100,000 cannabis plant clones from Ontario, and it still has room for 200,000 more.

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Residents say lights from a legal marijuana grow-op in Langley are making their night sky as bright as day.



Resident Doug Bilesky stands in front of the sprawling 30-acre facility that's being touted by operators as the largest legal cannabis production facility in the world.



The facility says it has blackout blinds, but residents say they aren't working well enough.

Residents say their problem isn't the pot itself, but the lights used to grow it.

"It's really disruptive," said resident Doug Bilesky. "It looks, like, nuclear. It's orange and glowing and then the whole sky lights up."

Images neighbours provided CTV News show a glow from the facility illuminating an otherwise dark night sky.

"It's practically daylight," said Michelle Nicholls. "I walk out of my barn to feed the animals at night and I don't need a flashlight."

Victor Krahn with BC Tweed told CTV News last weekend that the facility has black out shades, but residents say they don't seem to be working.

"Whatever shades they're using are either insufficient or not working at all," Nicholls said.

The operators did not respond to requests for comment from CTV on Sunday.

The Township of Langley said it's aware of the operation at the greenhouses, but said municipal bylaws are inapplicable since the facility has a valid licence from Health Canada.

Bilesky said the township has given residents a form they can submit complaints to. Whether anything can be done, though, remains uncertain.

"The operation itself is probably fine. I'm sure they're working with the local authorities on it," said Bilesky. "It's just the disruptive nature of it."

With a report from CTV Vancouver's Breanna Karstens-Smith
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
talk about a massive pile of BUGS (::confused::blsmoke:

JUST WOW comes to mind..

to see this stuff unfolding is friggin hilarious..
MORE SHWAGS PLEASE! ;) :idea::hug::blsmoke:
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
whats it going to do to all the indigenous plants in the area? i bet in 5 years it'll all be the same 2 or 3 light tolerant species growing anywhere close to it, everything else will have died out. and how will the local wildlife adapt?........
....this is a big impact on the local environment, and it's going to have some kind of repercussions, i'm just curious what they're actually going to be
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
regardless....they should turn out their lights..or shut down during night hours :)
or use blinds and or WALLS to stop the leak!
 

stoned-monkey

Well-Known Member
i think something as new as legal marijuana should go above and beyond in being respectful to your neighbors. we are trying to shed a wrongful but bad image already.
I live in Michigan where it mostly cold and overcast and my sky doesn't light up like that not even the local cities with lots of businesses, unless a house/barn is on fire.
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
i think something as new as legal marijuana should go above and beyond in being respectful to your neighbors. we are trying to shed a wrongful but bad image already.
I live in Michigan where it mostly cold and overcast and my sky doesn't light up like that not even the local cities with lots of businesses, unless a house/barn is on fire.
x1000
 

zoic

Well-Known Member
I wear my sunglasses at night to block the light of a million suns that some headlights seem to illuminate. I cannot even understand how this light bothers people so much, most people are sleeping anyway. Sounds to me like some spoiled whiners, who just are not getting everything to bend to their will.
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
no growing here,,,,

baseball and sports are not played 24/7 365 every night!....
but I hear ya Dan..

I just think LP Businesses should be handled different !.. (:
 

itsmehigh

Well-Known Member
So can cities/municipalities make rules or not?..and if not, then nobody can prevent anyone from growing.
ALR trumps municipal bylaws. Trust me the mayor is trying everything to shut these guys down. The Township of Langley is dead set about cannabis cultivation on ALR land. Tweed is using a loophole to get around the city bylaw, by leasing the greenhouse and processing and selling at another facility.

Itsme.
 
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