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Marijuana legalization: dispensaries will keep selling weed in 2017, and police will keep raiding them

Torontos marijuana dispensaries had a turbulent 2016, and there are no signs that 2017 will be any different for the fledgling businesses and their many customers.

New legislation not yet introduced, so police say they'll continue to enforce the law

A Toronto marijuana dispensary is raided by police last May. (Martin Trainor/CBC)

Toronto's marijuana dispensaries had a turbulent 2016, and there are no signs 2017 will be any different for the fledgling businesses and their many customers.

The dispensaries plan to continue selling marijuana and police plan to continue raiding them.

"They are serving a need," MichaelMcLellan, spokesperson for the Canadian Cannabis Retail Council, said of Toronto's marijuana dispensaries.

"There are still tens of thousands if not hundreds of thousands of patients frequenting marijuana retailers here in Toronto and I think they will continue to do so," McLellan said in an interview.

The number of marijuana dispensaries exploded in 2016. In some areas, the proliferation of pot shops caused concern among neighbours, according to Toronto police.

In response, police launched a series of raids. Project Claudialed todozens of arrests and the seizure of thousands of dollars of marijuana.

Toronto police chief interrupted at pot press conference

8 years ago
Duration 1:27
Mark Saunders has a number of people removed during briefing

Some shops closed after the raids, but many remained open. Some shops raided by policesimply reopened afterwards.

For those that remain, the raids have impacted business. McLellan said the police activity is increasing the criminal "stigma" attached to marijuana and that customers are steering clear of the shops because they fear getting caught up in a raid.

"There has definitely been a lot fewer customers frequenting dispensaries," he said.

While legalization appears to be on its way, possessing and selling pot is still illegal Canada. McLellan saidthis "legal grey area" should be filled by municipal regulations for dispensaries.

'We've been left holding the bag'

Multiple attempts to get Toronto city council to tackle the issue have failed. Most councillors want to wait for the full legalization framework to be set by the federal government before coming up with their own bylaws.

But they're getting impatient.

Coun. Paula Fletcher is concerned that the federal government's marijuana legalization process is taking too long. (CBC)

"Not much has happened. I'm very disappointed that we've been left holding the bag," Coun.Paula Fletcher (Ward 30) told CBC Toronto.

"This is a big vacuum and the federal government should pretty quickly decide how it wants to manage the marijuana issue."

Despite the clear intention of the federal government to legalize pot as soon as it can, criminalization continues.

"There is no grey area. The dispensaries are breaking the law," Toronto police spokesperson MarkPugashsaid in an interview.

The initial ProjectClaudiaraids were handled by the Toronto police drug squad. The investigation of dispensaries has since been handed over to local divisions, which carry out raids based on complaints and public safety concerns, Pugashsaid.

Those raids, he said, are expected to continue in 2017.

"We will continue to enforce the law."

But some councillors saidthe ongoing enforcement of marijuana laws by Toronto police and city bylaw officers is not the best use of city resources.

"Let's stop that. It's a waste of money," Coun.Jim Karygiannis (Ward 39)told CBC Toronto.

Ward 39 Coun. Jim Karygiannis said police raids on marijuana dispensaries are a waste of resources and should be halted. (CBC)

Karygiannis saidthat the money spentto investigate and raid pot dispensaries is wasted if the charges don't stick.

"Now that the judges have the signal that it will be legal, they will throw those charges out of court," he said.

Dispensaries are also being sanctioned by the City of Toronto's Municipal Licensing and Standards division.

Tracey Cook, the division's executive director, saidthe dispensaries are violating a zoning bylaw that only permits licensed marijuana producers to operate in certain industrial areas.

Enforcement of that bylaw will also continue in the new year. "It's illegal until the law changes," Cook said.

While the federal government plans to table its new marijuana legislation in the spring of 2017, it will take much longer to study the bill and eventually pass it into law.

It will likely be at least 2018 by the time the legalization process is complete. But in the meantime, Joe Cressy says this "letter of the law" status quo doesn't have to continue.

Coun. Joe Cressy said the federal government should provide cities with interim guidance on how to deal with marijuana dispensaries. (CBC)

The Ward 20 councillor saidthe federal government could help cities deal with the growth of dispensaries before legalization is finalized.

"Rather than waiting for the comprehensive framework, we need some clear guidance today from the federal government," Cressy said.

"Why carry on with the criminalization approach in the interim? Are we going to be pardoning people afterwards?"