Policy changes coming for manufacturing cannabis in North Huron

Twitter icon
metal frame

North Huron is planning to join several surrounding municipalities in regulating the location of cannabis production facilities by establishing “setbacks to sensitive uses.”

One of the main reasons for the bylaw change is the smell created when growing marijuana.

Other municipalities in Huron County have adopted bylaws to regulate the production of cannabis, including Huron East, Central Huron, and Morris-Turnberry. The setbacks adopted by these municipalities were modelled by a bylaw drafted and adopted by Norfolk County.

The housekeeping amendment to the current zoning bylaw will be discussed at the Jan. 17 council meeting. The public is invited to join the conversation to provide input on the final decision.

Huron County planner Hanna Homan presented the report to North Huron council and said that the council would be provided with proposed bylaw text for consideration at the public meeting.

“At a high-level the bylaw would define sensitive uses, establish setbacks to sensitive uses, and establish requirements for air treatment control,” she said.

Homan’s report said that due to the legalization of the production and consumption of recreational cannabis, many municipalities in Ontario have adopted bylaws to regulate the location of cannabis production facilities.

In 2015, during the review of the North Huron Zoning Bylaw, provisions were introduced to permit the use of medical marihuana facilities in the Light Industrial Zone (IND1), Heavy Industrial Zones (IND2), General Agriculture Zone (AG1), and Agricultural Commercial/Industrial Zone (AG3).

In 2019, through a municipally initiated housekeeping amendment, the wording and definitions for these facilities were updated to ‘cannabis production facilities to be consistent with the language used by Health Canada, following recreational legalization.’

There are no provisions in the previous zoning bylaw that include setbacks to sensitive uses for these facilities. The proposed bylaw would apply across all lands in the township; therefore, a notice will be published in local newspapers.

 
e-mail icon Facebook icon Twitter icon LinkedIn icon Reddit icon
Rate this article: 
Article category: 
Regional Marijuana News: