NS: Landlord Shuts Halifax Marijuana Shop, But Owner Vows To Reopen

Katelyn Baker

Well-Known Member
A Halifax marijuana dispensary has been locked out by its landlord, but owner Shirley Martineau vows to reopen Auntie's Health and Wellness in a new location.

"I'm shocked," Martineau said Friday when CBC News told her the store was shuttered. "They accepted the rent."

Martineau said she hasn't been back to the downtown shop, which openly sold marijuana to anyone over the age of 19, since she was arrested following a police raid late last month.

A notice posted to the front door Friday on behalf of landlord NewGen Halifax Properties GP said Auntie's staff are barred from entering the storefront, can't keep anything inside and face arrest if they violate the ban.

"I didn't expect it to go this wild," said Martineau.

"All I attempted to do was help patients that needed my help without a licence."

It is illegal to possess or sell pot in Canada and federal regulations prohibit the sale of medical marijuana through a retail storefront.

Martineau said she decided to sell marijuana when people who couldn't get a medical prescription came to her. It was her plan to use profits from recreational users to offer products to medicinal users for free.

She said Auntie's Health and Wellness, which registered as a business with the province in June, will set up shop somewhere new.

"I've got people to help. I don't know where, or how," she said, adding that her phone and computer have been seized by police.

Police had said they wouldn't investigate Martineau's business unless they received a complaint.

Uneven playing field for other businesses

Paul MacKinnon, executive director of the Downtown Halifax Business Commission, said he's heard from members concerned about the dispensary.

He said business owners complained the shop was operating without a business occupancy permit and that it brought a police raid to the street.

"If there are businesses that operate downtown in a legal manner, how can one operate in what doesn't seem to be a legal manner?" said MacKinnon.

The police raid, he said, "is just not good for the overall business environment."

MacKinnon said no one seemed to mind that Martineau was selling marijuana, but thought businesses should wait until the laws actually change before selling what is still an illegal product.

"Obviously any landlord would have concerns if there were arrests being made with one of their tenants."

MacKinnon expects to see retail options for marijuana if the federal government follows through with plans to legalize it, but no one knows if it will be through independent shops, through the post, or through government-controlled facilities like liquor commissions.

MikeHall.jpg


News Moderator: Katelyn Baker 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Landlord Shuts Halifax Marijuana Shop, But Owner Vows To Reopen
Author: Jon Tattrie
Contact: CBC News
Photo Credit: Mike Hall
Website: CBC News
 
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