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Ottawa

Stittsville councillor opposes medical marijuana dispensary after visit

Stittsville Councillor Shad Qadri says a medical marijuana dispensary in his ward is operating outside the law, despite the owner's efforts to argue his facility is secure and would only dispense to people with prescriptions.

'I'm putting my neck on the line right now,' says owner of Stittsville medical pot shop

'You don't have an operating license of any kind.'

8 years ago
Duration 0:40
Stittsville councillor Shad Qadri tells medical marijuana dispensary owner his business is illegal.

Stittsville Councillor Shad Qadri visited a new medical marijuana dispensary on Iber Road after publicly declaring his opposition to the faciltyand left without changing his mind.

Magna Terra owner Franco Vigile invited Stittsville residents to visit his facility Wednesday in a bid to ease community concerns about its safety.

Vigile said he had chosen the location to be more than a kilometre from the nearest school or community centre, part of his series of rules he's imposed on his facility.

"I'm not in a foot traffic area, I'm in an industrial zone," Vigile said."I have a three-stage process when you're entering the clinic. You cannot even gain access to the reception area until you've been validated from our receptionist on camera."

Franco Vigile owns Magna Terra, a medical marijuana dispensary opening a second location in Stittsville. (CBC)

Vigile said his staff would not allow minors or anyone with their face covered to enter the facility. Staff will also ask for government-issued photo identification and a doctor's prescriptionas they set up their client's accounts and dispense a variety of marijuana-derived products.

The extra measures werenot enough to impress the councillor, who says the bottom line is the facility should not be operating. He ended his meeting with Vigilesaying there was no getting past that.

"They're notlicensedand they're notlegalin terms of both distributing the material they're doing and the facility they'reusing,"Qadrisaid.

'It's like going to the pharmacy'

Vigile said Magna Terra is filling a gap in personalized care for medical marijuana patients. Right now, doctors prescribe medical marijuana and prescriptions are filled via mail order from licensed providers such asTweed in Smiths Falls, Ont.

"We are filling a huge void in the public demand for this method of accessing their medicine and that should be recognized and appreciated," Vigilesaid.

Margaret Hofsink, a client of Magna Terra medical marijuana dispensary, said she received better care from the company than a licensed provider. (CBC)

Margaret Hofsink uses medical marijuana to treat symptoms of multiple sclerosis such as spasms in her legs, anxiety, depression and fatigue. She said mail order services don't provide the same degree ofpersonalized care.

"They keep track of what you haveand what you needand what you've usedthat makes a big difference," she said.

Hofsinksaid Stittsville residents don't need to worry about what the dispensary might bring with itbased on her experience at Magna Terra's other location onCarling Avenue.

"You don't see people standing smoking or using outside the place or anything like that. People come they get their stuff and they go. It's like going to a pharmacy."

'I'm putting my neck on the line'

Vigileacknowledged he's in a legal grey-area, but said he wants to see rules on bricks-and-mortar marijuana dispensaries.

'I'm putting my neck on the line right now so that these people can have safe and convenient access to their medication,"Vigile said.

The backroom of the Magna Terra medical marijuana dispensary where clients will be able to see products once it begins operating in Stittsville. (Matthew Kupfer/CBC)

"I feel the government shouldand the city, for that matter...should come up with a sensible resolution in the meantime so that we're able to still provide their preferred method of accessing their medicine."

Vigile said he gets his products from licensed providers in British Columbia.

Qadri said the rules around dispensing medical marijuana are up to the federal government, not the city. He said he supports the use of medical marijuana with a doctor's prescription and distributed by licensed providers.

"They are allowed to get that medicine from Tweed, via mail order system, and they're receiving that product in that fashion," Qadri said."Why do we need an unlicensed, unauthorized facility to be able to preempt that process?"

The councillor said the building Magna Terra is using isn't zoned for retail, but it will be up to police to put anend to the dispensary.

"I'm working with the police to see what kind of investigation they're working on and see if they can shut it down."