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A Growing Job Market In Vancouver

October 5th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in All about Vancouver

Mc Marijuana
Creative Commons License photo credit: Simon Davison

The Canadian press bring us this breaking story:

There’s green to be made in British Columbia’s marijuana industry.

And it’s tax-free.

But there isn’t a shortage of people willing to do the work.

Pot clippers - also known as trimmers - groom marijuana plants that have been harvested from fields or indoor grow operations. The workers pare down the buds from the plants to make them presentable for sale.

A demand for workers throughout the province starts at the beginning of fall, when most outdoor crops are ready to be harvested.

Payment is either on an hourly basis, starting around $10 an hour, or by weight, according to individuals who have worked in the business but did not want to be identified. Meals are often provided and clippers are usually allowed to keep some of the product for personal use.

Since the sale of marijuana is illegal, trust plays a big role in scouting potential employees, which is why some people interviewed did not want their identities revealed.

One woman said she found out about the job through a friend, who lives in a remote part of the province. She spent two weeks earning the trust of the people who ran the outdoor grow op before being offered a job.

The woman never saw the crops. Instead, she was taken to a sheltered space, which she described as “cosy,” where large amounts of dried plants were laid out.

She and several others spent up to 14 hours a day trimming buds off plants using special gardening scissors.

“By that point I was falling off my chair,” she said of the long hours.

Although the work was repetitive and labour-intensive, the woman said she trimmed as much as she could because she was getting paid by the ounce. She could make up to $300 in cash for a single day’s work.

“My relationship with cash was shifting, it was just paper,” she said. “I was stuffing it into my pocket, I was like, ‘This is demented.’ “

The woman said she looks back on the experience favourably and would do it again in the future. Although there were pitfalls - along with the long hours, she also started feeling sick from breathing in dust in the close quarters - she made a lot off money in four weeks.

Jacob Hunter, who works for the B.C. Marijuana Party, said he worked as a clipper while a student in Prince George. He had a hard time finding summer work in the city and was complaining to his pot dealer about his student loans when he was offered a job.

At $10 an hour, it may not have seemed that lucrative. But putting in long days paid off.

“They pay overtime, even though it was black market,” he said. “You’d still get time-and-a-half for eight hours and double time for 12.”

Hunter said he worked alongside several other people in someone’s basement. He said while the work was monotonous, he enjoyed getting a “contact high” from handling large quantities of weed.

Overall, he described it as a decent job.

“They make it very comfortable, you’re sitting on a chair, comfortably in someone’s house,” Hunter said. “It’s warm, they pass around joints a lot and all your meals are paid for.”

“No one’s getting rich off of it but you can make a decent, middle-class-level living by working just with friends and growing a normal amount and not being involved with organized crime,” he said.

Staff Sgt. Dave Goddard of the RCMP’s Vancouver drug unit said operations with between 500 and 1,000 plants generally hire extra help to clip and monitor the plants. Larger-scale operators often have up to seven different grow operations and employ larger staffs, he said.

“There’s an awful lot of unemployed people out there, and this is a way that they have of making money on a cash basis that is largely undisclosed to the government,” he said. “Obviously they aren’t being taxed on it because they’re not receiving a T4 at the end of the year, I can guarantee you that.”

In 30 years with the Mounties, Goddard said he’s busted as many as 500 grow operations. He said clippers get charged along with everyone else involved, usually with possession of marijuana, production of marijuana or possession for the purpose of trafficking.

He strongly advises people to stay away from such employment, regardless of the scale of the operation.

“(Clippers) don’t consider themselves to be criminals, quite often” he said.

“It’s against the law, I shouldn’t have to advise anyone.”



Strange Bedfellows

September 17th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Canada Election

Leaf
Creative Commons License photo credit: mag3737

According to CBC:

The federal New Democrats have lost a candidate over a very public love of cannabis.

The NDP has confirmed that Dana Larsen submitted his resignation to the party’s provincial campaign manager.

Party spokesman Brad Lavigne said information came to light about “activities that were not in keeping with the policies and direction” of the party.

The NDP declined to elaborate on what those activities were, but allegations have arisen that Larsen, who had been running in West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast, is a member of the Vancouver Seed Bank. It sells seeds for coca plants along with seeds for marijuana and poppy plants.

Larsen was a candidate for the federal Marijuana Party in 2000 and a founding member of the B.C. Marijuana Party.

I am surprised on 2 counts…

One is that the NDP had a candidate from the Marijuana Party and then information “came to light”, and second is that it would matter here in BC. He was the the former editor of Cannabis Culture magazine.

His Myspace page is also very obvious.

Founder of Simon Fraser University’s League for Ethical Action on Drugs (1989-1993)

Founding editor of “The Hype” newsletter for IV drug users (1990-1994)

Founding Editor of Cannabis Culture Magazine (1993-2004)

Author of the Pot Puzzle Fun Book (2000)

Host of the Weedy Wednesday Smokefest on Pot-TV (1999-2002)

Publisher of Cannabis Kultur, the German edition of Cannabis Culture (2001-2003)

Canadian Marijuana Party Candidate, West Vancouver - Sunshine Coast (2000)

Founding member of BC Marijuana Party, and Candidate (2001)

Interim Leader of the BC Marijuana Party (2002)

Executive member of Sunshine Coast - Powell River NDP Constituency Association (2004-present)

Founder of eNDProhibition, the anti-prohibition wing of Canada’s NDP (2005)

Author of HAIRY POTHEAD AND THE MARIJUANA STONE (2007)

New Democratic Party candidate for ‘West Vancouver - Sunshine Coast”.

Didn’t think this would be an issue. It’s easier to buy pot in Vancouver than beer.

Apparently it is.

Check this out though - there’s more to the story…

All This At $10 A Pack

August 22nd, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in All about Vancouver

Smokers have it bad all around in Vancouver. First, it’s a small fortune for cigarettes. Then, following the letter of the law, you should be smoking in the middle of the road.

There’s little patience for smokers as demonstrated in this video. The anti-smoking Nazi goes after a guy who’s smoking outside of a spot where they smoke pot without interruption.

You need to be 6 meters from a doorway to smoke… or, oddly enough, inside the Amsterdam Cafe.

If you really want to smoke, you’ll be safer taking in the Vansterdam Pot Tour

From the good’ ol days…