Source: The Toronto Star
A WHIFF OF
FREEDOM
After Canada's Pot Laws Ended Up In
Limbo, Those Who Like To Indulge
Emerged From Hiding
The Hot
Box Cafe is nestled quietly among butcher shops and vintage
clothing stores
in Kensington Market and, like most cafes, it's a place for
meeting friends,
talking philosophy and getting a fix.
But while caffeine is readily
available here, the substance of choice is a
little more chill: weed, pot,
marijuana, grass, herb. Call it what you
will, people are smoking it, sharing
joints with people they've never met
before.
"It's a hell of a lot
better than smoking alone," says Denis, who prefers
not to give his last name
because he's still in the closet when it comes to
pot smoking, even though
he's been smoking for 30 years.
"I grew up when being caught toking put
you in jail. But I heard there was
a smoking parlour here, and I came in.
When you're with others, the high is
accentuated."
Hit the Hot Box any
afternoon at around 4:20, the international hour of
herb, and you'll find it
hard to score one of the 40 or so seats in the
garden out back. It's strictly
BYOW -- bring your own weed. The Hot Box
makes its money selling sandwiches
and fruit smoothies, not drugs, since
selling marijuana is still against the
law in Canada. The "no dealing" rule
is enforced by staff and faithful
customers who don't want to see the place
close down because of legal
trouble.
Located at the back of a head shop called Roach-O-Rama on
Baldwin St., the
cafe opened in May, shortly after a court decision rendered
Canada's law
against possession of marijuana ineffectual, forcing police to
forgo laying
charges, at least until an appeal clarifies the law.
The
Hot Box opens at 9 a.m., the hour of "wake 'n' bake," and 300 to 400
people
pass through on any given day for a toke and a sandwich or fruit
smoothie,
whether it's a sunny Saturday or a workaday Tuesday.
Sharing is de
rigueur. Pot lovers mingle and pass blunts, pipes, bongs and
cookies from
hand to hand. Some play chess in the fenced garden. Others
chat. But, mostly,
they just sit back, way back, and relax.
And it's not just your standard
hippie potheads that drop in for a doob.
There are grandmotherly types --with
their kids and grandkids, no less --
doctors, lawyers, students and lots of
other people who look perfectly
straight, but aren't.
Similar cafes
have been operating in Vancouver and Saint John, but the idea
is new to
Toronto and it could soon become part of the local cultural
landscape. Other
cafes are rumoured to be ready to start up, including one
at the very heart
of the city, near the intersection of Yonge and Bloor Sts.
The cafes are
just one part of a trend that has emerged in Toronto this
summer, as pot
smokers take advantage of the fact that the laws against
marijuana are in a
state of limbo. While public indulgence has been
happening for a long time in
hidden back alleys and remote areas public
parks, this summer, it's become a
common occurrence in the light of day and
in populated places, where
bystanders can smell the skunk.
"I've definitely noticed that people are
smoking in places where you
wouldn't expect them to," says actor and
scenester Scott Sheehan. "I've
noticed it on regular bar patios," says
Sheehan. "And I've noticed it in
the daytime, too, which was kind of weird.
You could be sitting there
eating brunch on a patio and smell it ... And I've
smelled it more on the
street, too, just like, a little group of people
walking by."
A quick poll of local restaurants found that most won't
allow pot smoking
on their patios if they find customers indulging, even
though it's not
technically against the law.
"We don't allow people to
smoke (pot) here, even though it's technically
permitted. We still enforce
the no smoking rule," says Andre Rosenbaum,
owner of the Rivoli restaurant on
Queen St. W. "But I have noticed people
smoking it on Queen St."
The
same rule applies at the Black Bull Hotel and Tavern and Bambu by the
Lake,
both of which have large patios.
Trinity Bellwoods Park is a hotspot
among hippies, who often congregate in
large groups and pass a joint around
under the big tree at the north end of
the park. On the first night of the
big blackout in August, the tree was a
veritable pot smokers' paradise, as
precious buds were shared among friends
and strangers alike.
Toronto
city councillor Joe Pantalone, Ward 19 Trinity Spadina, in which
Trinity
Bellwoods Park is located, acknowledges that people do smoke pot on
city
property.
"It goes on in our streets and obviously, it goes on in our
parks," says
Pantalone. "But it's not up to the city or the city inspectors
to enforce
federal laws. It's up to the federal government and the police to
enforce.
And obviously, pot is not a high priority, so this goes
on."
The issue has never come up in city council meetings, he
notes.
Subway stations and streetcar stops have also recently
become
spliff-spotting locations, even though smoking of any kind on TTC
property
is against the rules. At least one party at the recent international
film
fest was alight.
"There was something going around at the party,
for sure," says Ron Mann, a
filmmaker whose documentary Go Further premiered
at the festival. The film
told the story of activist and actor Woody
Harrelson's recent trek across
the United States to promote organic living.
The cast and crew partied down
at an organic food and wine bash at the
Distillery District, and the action
went on till the wee hours.
Mann,
a Torontonian who made Grass, a 1999 doc narrated by Harrelson about
the
history of marijuana prohibition, also made a public comment prior to
a
screening of Go Further protesting the arrest in the U.S. of actor
Tommy
Chong, the star of the popular Cheech and Chong movies. Earlier this
month,
Chong was sentenced in a Pennsylvanian court to nine months in federal
jail
because he was selling marijuana pipes on the Internet. Selling
drug
paraphernalia is illegal in the U.S.
As a board member of the
U.S.-based National Organization for the Reform of
Marijuana Laws, Mann is an
advocate of decriminalization, and he used the
film festival platform to make
his point.
"We want to move public opinion against the stupidity of this
kind of
thing," says Mann. "It doesn't threaten the health or welfare of
anyone,
and I think most people understand that. But we can't leave the pot
laws in
the hands of the police. It's a waste of law enforcement money to
prosecute
and imprison a non-violent seller of pipes."
Mann's public
statement was motivated in part to bring the subject of
marijuana out into
the open.
"There are many, many marijuana smokers in Toronto and around
the world,"
he says. "This is not a marginal group of people, but they're not
visible
because of the harsh laws against it. It's only a matter of time
until it
becomes legal in Canada, because people aren't believing the
propaganda any
more."
Indeed, it seems public opinion about pot is
changing in Canada. A
Sun/Leger poll earlier this summer found that 83 per
cent of Canadians want
pot laws to be less stringent, and shortly after the
results of that poll
were made public, Prime Minister Jean Chretien announced
plans to create
legislation that decriminalizes possession and cultivation of
marijuana for
personal use, as recommended by a House of Commons report last
fall.
According to the proposal, smokers might receive a ticket, but no
criminal
record, for possessing less than 30 grams of the drug, while drug
dealers
would be punished more harshly than ever.
But until that
legislation is enacted, users are free to smoke whenever and
wherever they
want, without the risk of a ticket or even confiscation.
"The last time I
got stopped by a cop, he said, 'It's not legal ... yet,'
and he let me go,"
says Denis.
"I've always been smoking publicly, and I think a lot of
people have," says
Jason, a regular user who prefers not to use his last
name. "But now it's
just more open, like you don't worry about it as much.
You don't really
think about offending anyone any more. Because even if they
are offended,
what are they gonna do? Call the cops? I don't think
so."
Toronto police chief Julian Fantino advised officers earlier this
summer to
confiscate pot and record the names and addresses of people found
using it.
However, the Hot Box Cafe, which operates in the bright light of
day in a
heavily populated area, has not had trouble with the
police.
Could new attitude toward pot smoking turn Toronto into Amsterdam
of North
America?
"The cops around here are really nice. They come in
and say hi," says Abi
Roach, who owns the cafe and the attached head shop.
"But they don't even
walk all the way to the back," she says, referring to
the crowded garden
patio where the air is thick with the pungent smell of
pot.
Police at 52 Division, which patrols Kensington Market, said they've
never
heard of specific pot cafes in Toronto and referred inquiries to
headquarters.
"We don't know of any specific locations where that's
happening," says
Constable Shehara Valles, a communications officer for the
Toronto police.
When the Star informed her of the address of the Hot Box, she
checked to
see if police had visited the cafe on official business.
"I
have checked with uniformed and plainclothes officers in 52 Division,
and we
have not received calls to attend that address," she said.
She explained
that it's common for officers to drop into businesses while
walking on
patrol, but that they don't necessarily report or record those
casual
visits.
Though Roach isn't breaking the law by allowing people to smoke
pot in her
cafe, legal expert Alan Young says it's unlikely the police don't
know
what's going on there.
"In light of the media coverage, and in
light of the fact that (Roach) has
not tried to operate her cafe in a
clandestine way, I think it's unlikely
that they don't know about it," says
Young, who has defended many pro-pot
activists. "But it's better to say they
aren't aware than to admit they
aren't equipped to deal with it," he
adds.
Young says marijuana seizures are more theory than
practice.
"I think they're embarrassed to do it because their authority
is so
dubious," says Young, a defence lawyer active in the movement
to
decriminalize pot. He says seizures could create a "legal quagmire"
down
the road that would be far more trouble than they're worth.
"They
really should reconsider their decision to seize," says Young.
"Because
without legal authority, a seizure is theft. It's very clear in
the
law."
Could this new attitude of acceptance turn Toronto into the
Amsterdam of
North America? Perhaps.
Just as Amsterdam has become a
destination among Europeans who want to
spend a weekend indulging in their
favourite herbal treat, so are North
Americans turning an eye to
Toronto.
"We have tons of Americans who read about us on the Internet,"
says Roach.
"We had a family from Rochester recently, and a couple of kids
drove up
from Boston. The response has been mad good."
Roach may have
been the one to start the bandwagon, but others are hopping
on, notes Young.
"I get about two calls a week from people who are
interested in doing this,"
he says, noting that people are taking advantage
of this temporary loophole
in the law to test how much Canadian legal
authorities will tolerate when it
comes to marijuana. Unless there's a
grassroots community backlash -- which
he says hasn't yet happened -- it
could lead to a de facto legalization of
pot similar to that in Amsterdam.
"Right now there is no lawful basis for
the police to be involved," says
Young. "It's when people move to the next
stage, which is inevitable. When
the cafes start small-scale distribution,
there could be a problem."
But Roach-O-Rama, says Young, sets a good
example of how peaceful and
law-abiding a pot cafe can be. He recently
dropped in for a visit.
"I'm pleased with the cleanliness and the lack of
rambunctiousness, which
is very important for maximizing marijuana use," he
says.
"People tend to associate it with alcohol, which often causes
community
disturbance. But this is exactly the opposite. What I saw was 15
people
sitting around enjoying themselves. You could hear Latin salsa music
and
everyone was enjoying the
sunshine."
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