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Calgary

Cowtown’s Legal Cannabis Market Has Changed Over The Ages

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If someone lacked connections to purchase a gram of hash or a dimebag of Sativa in Calgary from the 1980s through to the 1990s, they might have cruised the transit corridor along Seventh Avenue in search of a deal.

Seventh Avenue always played second best to Eighth Avenue, making this misunderstood byway a setting for broken-down hotels, taverns with a bit of rough, along with a handful of half-star diners. Long before legalization, the weed dealers stood on the sidewalks of Seventh Ave as the CTrains rumbled by, searching for people via nods or winks, hoping to make quick sales before the cops noticed.

Years later, after cannabis legalization became a reality in October 2018, Alberta became a green powerhouse, even surpassing the marijuana-friendly province of British Columbia. Matt Zabloski in Policy Options said “Alberta has emerged as the exception to the national trend of a struggling legal cannabis market. It has almost as many retail stores licensed as all other provinces combined.”

Calgary’s illegal market hasn’t withered away yet. Dealers still work on Seventh Ave or meander through the Olympic Plaza, but they’ve shifted to hawking dodgier substances like ecstasy. Meanwhile, an illegal cannabis industry in Canada still exists, but Canada’s underground pot retail sales are controlled by internet-based vendors servicing customers by mail order instead of conducting their transactions through street hustles. CTV News reported the discovery of an illicit online dispensary in early January based in a southwest apartment.

Except for higher prices because of excise stamps, packaging and added taxes, there’s little incentive for Canadian buyers to go the illegal route, especially in Calgary. If a Calgarian prefers an upfront, government regulated eighth of Indica or Sativa of consistent quality in 2020, they can buy their weed legally from a selection of stores across the city, from the Four20 Premium Market in Sage Hill in the northwest to NewLeaf Cannabis in the Midnapore Mall.

In contrast to Amsterdam – where cannabis isn’t legal, but tolerated – the weed shops are limited to the city’s Red Light District in De Wallen – the medieval centre filled with canals. Moreover, Amsterdam is considering a ban on tourists in their semi-legal cannabis cafes this February, further ensuring Calgary’s status as a gleaming, white-towered harbor for tokers living on the prairies.

Before prohibition lifted in October 2018, there were fears across Canada about spikes in teen usage, drugged driving and massive addiction rates. Teenage use for those aged 15 and older had risen slightly by two or three percentage points according to surveys by Stats Canada when comparing 2018 to 2019. But a Global News report last April said Canadian police weren’t arresting a greater number of stoned drivers after legalization. Plus, addiction to cannabis happens, but the penalties aren’t as severe compared to alcohol and opioids. The Canadian government themselves said not everyone who uses the substance develops an addiction, concurring with a Scientific American essay published in March 2012.

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Alberta

Three Calgary massage parlours linked to human trafficking investigation

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News release from the Alberta Law Enforcement Response Team (ALERT)

ALERT’s Human Trafficking unit has searched and closed three Calgary massage parlours. A year-long investigation has linked the businesses and its owner to suspected human trafficking.

ALERT arrested Hai (Anna) Yan Ye on April 16, 2024 and charged the 48-year-old with advertising sexual services, drug offences and firearms offences. The investigation remains ongoing and further charges are being contemplated.

Ye was linked to three commercial properties and two homes that were allegedly being used for illegal sexual activities and services. The massage parlours were closed following search warrant executions carried out by ALERT, the Calgary Police Service, and the RCMP:

  • Seagull Massage at 1034 8 Avenue SW;
  • 128 Massage at 1935 37 Street SW; and
  • The One Massage Centre at 1919 31 Street SE.
  • 1100-block of Hidden Valley Drive; and
  • 3100-block of 12 Avenue SW.

As result of the search warrants, ALERT also seized:

  • $15,000 in suspected proceeds of crime;
  • Shotgun with ammunition; and
  • Various amounts of drugs.

“We believe that these were immigrants being exploited into the sex trade. This has been a common trend that takes advantage of their unfamiliarity and vulnerability,” said Staff Sergeant Gord MacDonald, ALERT Human Trafficking.

Four suspected victims were identified and provided resources by ALERT’s Safety Network Coordinators.

ALERT’s investigation dates back to February 2023 when a tip was received about suspicious activity taking place at the since-closed Moonlight Massage. That location was closed during the investigation, in December 2023, when the landlord identified illegal suites on the premises.

The investigation involved the close cooperation with City of Calgary Emergency Management and Community Safety, Alberta’s Safer Communities and Neighbourhoods (SCAN) team, Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), and the RCMP.

Ye was released from custody on a number of court-imposed conditions.

Anyone with information about this investigation, or any case involving suspected human trafficking offences, is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477) or the Calgary Police Service non-emergency line at 403-266-1234.

ALERT was established and is funded by the Alberta Government and is a compilation of the province’s most sophisticated law enforcement resources committed to tackling serious and organized crime.

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Alberta

Building a 21st century transit system for Calgary

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From the Frontier Centre for Public Policy

By Randal O’Toole

Calgary Transit is mired in the past, building an obsolete transit system designed for an archaic view of a city. Before the pandemic, transit carried 45 percent of downtown Calgary employees to work, but less than 10 percent of workers in the rest of the Calgary urban area, showing that Calgary Transit doesn’t really serve all of Calgary; it mainly serves downtown.

That would have worked in 1909, when Calgary’s first electric streetcars began operating and most jobs were downtown. By 2016, less than 15 percent of Calgary jobs were downtown, and the pandemic has reduced that number further.

Rather than design a transit system that serves the entire urban area, Calgary Transit light-rail system reinforced its downtown focus. Transit ridership has grown since the city’s first light-rail line opened in 1981, but it was growing faster before the light rail began operating than it has since then. Now Calgary Transit is planning even more downtown-oriented light-rail lines.

Light rail is an expensive form of low-capacity transit. The word “light” in light rail refers not to weight but to capacity: the American Public Transportation Association’s transit glossary defines light rail as “an electric railway with a ‘light volume’ traffic capacity.” While a light-rail train can hold a lot of people, for safety reasons a single light-rail line can move no more than about 20 trains per hour in each direction.

By comparison, Portland, Oregon runs 160 buses per hour down certain city streets. An Istanbul busway moves more than 250 buses per hour. Bogota Columbia busways move 350 buses per hour. All these transitways cost far less per mile than light rail yet can move more people per hour.

Once they leave a busway, buses can go on any city street, reaching far more destinations than rail. If a bus breaks down or a street is closed for some reason, other buses can find detours while a single light-rail breakdown can jam up an entire rail line. If transportation patterns change because of a pandemic, the opening of a new economic center, or the decline of an existing center, bus routes can change overnight while rail routes take years and cost hundreds of millions of dollars to change.

To truly serve the entire region, Calgary Transit must recognize that buses are faster, more flexible, and can move more people per hour to more destinations at a lower cost than any rail system. It should also recognize that modern urban areas have many economic centers and use buses to serve all those centers.

Besides downtown, Calgary’s major economic centers—the airport, the University of Calgary, Chinook Center, the Seton health center, and others—are mostly located near freeway on- and off-ramps. Calgary Transit should identify ten or so such centers geographically distributed around the region. It should locate transit centers—which need be no more than curbside parking reserved for buses with some modest bus shelters—near the freeway exchanges closest to each center.

It should then operate frequent (up to five times per hour) non-stop buses from every center to every other center. A few secondary transit centers might have non-stop buses operate to just two or three other centers. Local bus routes should radiate away from each center to serve every neighborhood of the Calgary urban area.

Since non-stop buses will operate at freeway speeds, the average speed of this bus system will be more than double the average speed of Calgary’s current bus-and-rail system. Transit riders will be able to get from any corner of the urban area to any other part of the urban area at speeds competitive with driving.

Such a polycentric system will serve a much higher percentage of the region’s workers and other travelers than the current monocentric system yet cost no more to operate. It will cost far less to build than a single rail line since most of the necessary infrastructure already exists. While some may worry that buses will get caught in congestion, the solution is to fix congestion for everyone, not spend billions on a slow rail system that only serves a few people in the region.

It is time for Calgary Transit to enter the 21st century. A polycentric bus system may be the best way to do it.

Randal O’Toole is a transportation policy analyst and author of Building 21st Century Transit Systems for Canadian Cities. 

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