Also Available at Cannabis In Canada.ca
The day after 4/20 the Chief Licence Inspector of Vancouver sent the
Vancouver City Council a policy report with the subject: “Regulation of
Retail Dealers – Medical Marijuana-Related Uses”. There are more than 80
medical cannabis dispensaries in Vancouver; with a growth rate of 100%
in the past two years. This boom is unprecedented for several reasons.
For starters, there is no legal grey area: these dispensaries are for
every intents and purposes illegal. But given what City Councillor Kerry Jang called Ottawa's “prohibitionist approach,” Vancouver authorities feel compelled to act.
The BC Compassion Club opened in Vancouver in 1997. Once R. v. Parker made access to medicinal cannabis a Charter issue,
Health Canada responded with a plan on how patients could access
medicinal cannabis. There was nothing in these regulations – or in the
new regulations – about retail storefronts. But Vancouver and B.C.'s
cannabis farmers were, and still are, miles ahead of the other medical
cannabis regimes.
Yet for the past
couple of years, Vancouver's cannabis market has been testing its
limits. Since the BC Compassion Club opened in 1997, those eighty more
sprouted up; all of them unhampered by the city's regulatory framework
and bureaucracy. Consumer demand for cannabis combined with easily
obtainable medical prescriptions makes it an easy sell. Lack of
regulation keep costs low and profits high. It's clear the failure of
the “medical marijuana” regimes of the federal government caused this,
but lack of regulatory control over Vancouver's dispensaries do not
justify the recommended actions outlined in Chief Licence Inspector's
report.
There is clearly a consumer
demand for cannabis. Eighty dispensaries don't pop up out of nowhere.
All transactions within the dispensaries are voluntary; nobody is
forcing anybody to become a registered patient and purchase cannabis.
Unlike the federal government's MMPR, where patients are forced to
register with one of the 17 LPs, in Vancouver patients can patronize
many dispensaries. One medical prescription may, and likely will, allow
you register with every dispensary in the city (if you so chose to). The
key principle in this situation is voluntary association, one of our
fundamental freedoms under the Charter.
Voluntary association is not a principle to disregard. The associations
the dispensary owners made in order facilitate such retail space – the
exchanges with construction crews, electricians, and other various
trades people – were all voluntary. It's a seemingly trivial observation
but it packs quite the punch. For if the exchange between a buyer and
seller is voluntary, you can infer correctly that the exchange is
mutually beneficial.
If two people
are trading, each must have reverse preferences and thus value more what
they are receiving than what they are giving up. Otherwise no exchange
would take place. Exchanges – once involving money and spread out over a
large number of people – will result in market prices and an economy.
But even then, on an individual level there is a bargaining mechanism
going on behind every transaction. A buyer and seller will agree on a
market price because this price was established by buyers and sellers
interacting and finding an appropriate range where every buyer and
seller will have their preferences satisfied. Note: not every potential
buyer and seller will have their preferences satisfied because that
potential is infinite and Earth is bound by scarcity. Hence, prices are
numeric objectives for a disperse array of goods and services built from
more primitive capital resources (also priced accordingly) and
reflective of supply, demand and consumer valuation. Without prices,
there would be no civilization.
So
what does this have to do with Vancouver's dispensaries? Everything! The
inferences made from voluntary association and exchange will explain
why the dispensaries have been so numerous and profitable. Cannabis is a
highly desired commodity. For years it's been pushed underground by
government coercion. Over the last decade, it's become increasingly
available via retail storefront. With 86 dispensaries operating in
Vancouver, with the top three registering at least 10,000 members each,
and with a total of $300 million added to the local economy each year,
it's clear: voluntary association works. So what are the complaints? Why
regulate?
While it makes some sense
(arguably) for Vancouver City Council to ensure that all medical
cannabis businesses in their jurisdiction are “healthy, safe and in the
public interest,” how broadly those terms may be defined matters a great
deal. The Chief Licence Inspector sees it in the City Council's
authority to, “Protect Youth,” namely banning minors from dispensaries.
This includes employment, and prohibiting advertising to minors. From my
experience, most dispensaries are already following this practice.
There are many regulations in this report that are straightforward and
born of common sense.
Where things
begin to go wrong is under the “Prevent Crime” category, which is also
aptly titled, “Discourage Gang Involvement.” Far from living up to its
name, the pre-crime initiative treats all dispensary owners as criminals
first, which I suppose they technically are. Albeit, criminals of a
victimless crime. Although I hate to use the term victimless since the
drug war has claimed many.
In a
section of the report that was likely influenced by the Vancouver Police
Department, dispensary owners would be required to provide police
background checks and photo IDs on themselves and their staff on an
annual basis. There is also a limit of one business licence per person,
so no expanding or franchising. Somebody tell Don Briere from Weeds.
Looks like the consumer satisfaction that led him to profit and expand
his business will now face the coercive arm of the arbitrary City
Council regulations.
Under “Prevent
Crime” there is also no corporate ownership. Sounds good on paper (i.e.
no LPs) until someone wants to incorporate for liability reasons and is
unable to do so. There are also no transfers of licences to other
parties. Nor can owners use the same premises for other uses like
offering massages, food, liquor, or even ATMs. We saw above that
voluntary exchange creates wealth. Using the same principles, we can
infer that the blockage of exchanges by non-market participants destroy
wealth – whether by the thief that steals your wallet or the city
council that taxes and regulates your business. With regulations like
these, wealth is destroyed before it can be created. If the City acts on
this report, they will be like a vandal that breaks the window of a
dispensary so the dispensary owner is unable to buy a new suit with his
disposable income (thus enriching the tailor). Just as the dispensary
owner will buy a new window and think, “no new wealth has been created,”
despite the glass-blowers additional income - the dispensary owner can
only look at these regulations and ponder at how far the definition of
“health, safety and public interest,” can stretch.
“Prevent Crime” goes far beyond discouraging gang use. (However, one
questions how banning ATMs will discourage gang use. Why not ban all
ATMs everywhere?) The section also deals with capital requirements that
are eerily reminiscent of the MMPR and what's required for the LPs. It
will be required for dispensaries to have a monitored security and fire
alarm system, including video surveillance. One assumes basic security
and fire measures were in place before, as owners have incentives not to
become a victim of theft or fire, but having it “monitored” likely
means attaching it to the grid. In most buildings in Vancouver, the
smoke detectors are “smart” and are hooked to the grid. Disconnect that,
and they know about it.
The other
regulations are quite reasonable, such as having a security plan and
removing valuables from eyesight and locking them in storage when the
business is closed; basic stuff the owners were likely already doing
because it is in their self-interest. But other requirements are
bizarre, such as prohibiting staff from working alone or requiring
transparent storefronts. Many dispensaries have opaque window coverings
or shutters. This will no longer be allowed. The regulations also aim to
control business hours, ban mail or delivery of products (how will they
receive wholesale product? Utility bills? I'm not making this up, it's
seriously in there), and rules surrounding aesthetics. However, none of
these are as controversial as the banning of all food products.
Does this mean no more edibles and no more extracts? The regulations
make exemption for cooking oils so should we expect cannabis oil to
start being labelled as cooking oil? Unlikely. Section 24.5, part 12 of
Appendix E says, “No person shall sell food on the business premises of a
Retail Dealer – Medical Marijuana-related, except that this provision
does not apply to the sale of edible oils in sealed containers.” One can
only assume that “edible oils” means all extractions. I don't imagine
the Chief Licence Inspector of Vancouver wants to open up that can of
worms. Especially since Supreme Court of Canada Judges are currently deciding on that exact issue.
Existing dispensaries have to apply for a permit within 30 days upon
enactment of the regulations. Applications will be submitted and judged
by city bureaucrats. Those who don't comply will suffer from VPD
enforcement. Stage one of the application process is getting evaluated
on zoning regulations and whether the dispensary exists in the
appropriate area. Of course, who decides zoning regulations and what
area is ideal and appropriate for business is clearly not a result of
the matrix of consumer choices in a free and fair market. No, it is
decided by city bureaucrats who went to college for city planning and
know a whole lot more than you do about where your customers want your
business to be located so just shut up and accept it.
Once an applicant makes it past the first stage, Stage Two is
implemented which assigns demerit points if, a) the business is
considered a problem by the VPD, b) if the premises contain work
conducted without a proper building permit, c) if it has been the
subject of complaints by more than one person in the community, and d)
if the enterprise operates for profit. And just in case you think I'm
being hyperbolic, here is the actual wording of option d: “Is the
enterprise operated for profit (i.e. not a non- profit society)?” If the
answer is yes, this will cost you one demerit point in your
application.
Tying into Stage One,
the demerit tally will also take into consideration “clusters” of
cannabis dispensaries. Another zoning issue by those who know best,
“clusters” of dispensaries are to be discouraged for whatever reason.
Stage Three consists of complying with various bylaw regulations and
initiating a “community notification process” that gives busybody
residents an opportunity to complain and “provide feedback.” It's all
part of the “Good Neighbour Agreement” all Vancouver businesses are
coerced into.
Only after these three
stages of approval can a business license be issued. This is, of course,
is after the annual $30,000 fee is paid, plus the other hidden fees
implicit in the regulations; fees further serve the inflated nature of
over-regulation and a bureaucratic, bloated government. And just in case
an annual $30,000 sounds reasonable, consider the cost of the other business licences
one may compare to an illegal “marijuana dispensary”: an adult
entertainment store ($333), a “body-rub” parlour ($10,187), a social
escort service ($1,204) a casino ($11,662), betting on horse races
($11,662). A liquor licence will vary depending on size and regulatory
“class”, but the minimum is $133 a year and the maximum is $20,375. But
an actual liquor store only pays $372, with a delivery service at $162
per annum. And what about a “health enhancement centre” or a health care
office (which is what these dispensaries really boil down to)? The
former is $249, with the latter only $133 per annum.
During the process of approval, an existing dispensary can stay open
provided it meets, “basic health and life safety standards;” and that,
“inspectors will conduct a Special Inspection to ensure this standard is
met, and take immediate enforcement action against any unsafe
conditions on a priority basis.” One can only wish that, that basic
requirement were the sole regulatory requirement for, not only cannabis
dispensaries, but also all businesses in the Lower Mainland. It'd give
entrepreneurs more freedom to take risks – albeit ones that don't risk
their consumer health and safety and thus profitability. But risks that
reward innovation and invention. That is how horse and buggies become
automobiles; how a room filled with a giant reel-to-reel tape machines
become a tiny semiconductor in the palm of your hand.
That is the opposite of what Chief Licence Inspector is recommending.
Vancouver City Council would rather regulation that is openly
anti-profit, micro-manages subjective aspects of the business, and
discourages any action that would lead to economic expansion and
prosperity. Far from regulating Vancouver's dispensaries in a sensible
and reasonable fashion, this regulation takes the “prohibitionist
approach,” of Ottawa to the municipal level.
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