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“Those are the issues people have raised with me,” he said. “At the same time, I’ve heard from people that they’d very much like to go for a walk and smoke a marijuana joint in their local community.”

He said the public use of marijuana comes down to a balancing act that manages people who want to use a legal product and those who want nothing to do with cannabis.

“I think of the great smoke-ins in Vancouver on the 20th of April every year, where you’ve got tens of thousands of people all lighting joints at the same time,” Horgan said. “That’s a significant health issue there for other people.”

In Ontario, marijuana users will be prohibited from consuming pot outside of private residences.

British Columbia’s current Tobacco and Vapour Products Control Act sets a six-metre smoke-free buffer zone around doorways, air intakes and open windows to public and work places.

Stores, offices, and entrances to apartment buildings are considered public spaces or work places under the act, which also includes work vehicles, public transit, taxis, cafes, casinos and pubs and bars.

Vancouver also has a bylaw that bans smoking in parks and on beaches.

The Victoria-area Capital Regional District clean air bylaw makes all parks, playgrounds, playing fields, public squares and bus stops smoke-free. It also extends smoke-free buffer zones outside of business doorways, windows and air intakes to seven metres.

B.C. announced last week it will allow marijuana sales at private and public stores to buyers who are at least 19 years old.

The wholesale distributor of non-medical marijuana will be done through the B.C. Liquor Distribution Branch.

More details on provincial marijuana policy are expected early next year.