Time to end the
medical pot travesty
Perceptions by
Gerry Warner
So
Cranbrook is going to get a new industry. About time, you say and I agree
except I’m not so sure about the industry being talked about, namely medicinal
marijuana or “pot” as we called it in the good ol’ 60’s and we got high on it and
never thought of the alleged health benefits.
However, Cranbrook Council, and the one before it for
that matter, appears to be quite high on the prospect of making the Key City
the pot capital of the Kootenays and taking the dubious distinction away from
Nelson. But do our well-intended, if somewhat naïve councillors, have any idea
of what they may be tripping out on? I don’t think so.
Is there money in devil weed? You might as well ask if
the sky is blue or water wet. Health Canada estimates medicinal pot will be a
$1.3 billion industry by 2024 and this has launched a veritable “greenwash”
across Canada with producers from Halifax to Victoria chasing the elusive pot
of gold. Not to mention Cranbrook’s idea to stick a pot factory in an
industrial park somewhere with the mayor cutting a green ribbon on opening day.
But don’t throw your baggies away just yet because
there’s an awfully big fly in this medicinal ointment because Health Canada is
a bureaucracy, and like any government bureaucracy, has laid down some
stringent rules for hemp entrepreneurs wanting to get in on the greenwash. So
far, out of more than 1,000 applications from coast to coast, only around 20
have been approved as authorized producers of medicinal Mary Jane and the
application process can take as long as two years. “They (Health Canada) are
really an unfortunate bureaucracy under siege,” said Umar Syed, president of
Cann-Mart Inc. in a CBC interview last June. Syed said would-be pot purveyors
like him are “all dressed up and nowhere to go” as Health Canada struggles with
a “tsunami” of applications. And the agency is rejecting many applications as
it did last week with CEN Biotech which is seeking to build the world’s largest
marijuana factory in Ontario and is accused in an investigation by the Toronto
Globe and Mail of having “numerous misrepresentations” in its application and
misleading investors. CEN Biotech then issued a statement saying said it will
hash the matter out in court with Health Canada.
As of October, 2014, Health Canada refused 226
applications and issued only 22 licenses to producers with 291 still going
through the tortuous process. The delays are hurting the companies wanting get
in on the potrush. “They’re burning through money like crazy,” said Ottawa
lawyer Trina Fraser in a CBC interview last November. “Everybody’s going
bananas, out of their minds, frustrated with the process.”
Then there’s the little matter of whether the
estimated 500,000 or so medicinal pot users in Canada, 80 per cent of whom are
estimated to live in BC, are really toking up for the health benefits of the
still-illegal drug or just recreational users of BC Bud and its numerous pale
imitators. Shortly after April 1, 2014 when Health Canada issued its new
regulations for medicinal marijuana producers the Canadian Medical Association
issued the following statement:
“The CMA
still believes there is insufficient scientific evidence available to support
the use of marijuana for clinical purposes. It also believes there is
insufficient evidence on clinical risks and benefits, including the proper
dosage of marijuana to be used and on the potential interactions between this
drug and other medications.”
Hmmm. Not exactly a ringing endorsement, is it?
Despite this, the pot tsunami continues to crest on
the Left Coast with illegal but tolerated marijuana emporiums springing up all
over the Lower Mainland like pot plants after a summer rain. Vancouver alone
has 20 storefront pharmacies offering services like cannabis oil massages, WiFi
vapour lounges (sure to be a hit on Baker Street), and hemp juice bars. “We’d
like to educate people that you can heal yourself without pharmaceutical
drugs,” Matteo Suleyman, manager of the Sea to Sky Alternative Healing Society
told CBC News after opening his second location on the east side of Vancouver
complete with an in-house naturopathic doctor and a medicinal marijuana
smoothie bar.
In a CBC interview, Const. Brian Montague said Vancouver
police aren’t in a rush to bust so-called marijuana “pharmacies,” but the drug
is still illegal and things could change. “While these dispensaries are not a
priority, it does not mean they can’t become a priority if public safety
becomes a concern.”
Public safety indeed! Don’t you think it’s time to end
this farcical travesty and just legalize this dubious drug and its questionable
health benefits and let people decide for themselves if they want to inhale it, bake it, drink it or
rub it into their skin? All we’re doing now is making lawyers rich and
entrepreneurs greedy.
Gerry Warner is a
retired journalist and a non-smoker of anything, including pot.
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