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26 coffeeshops in downtown Amsterdam must close their doors

Posted: Wed 20th May 2009 06:24 am
by Puffin13
26 coffeeshops in downtown Amsterdam must close their doors
May 19, 2009
© DutchAmsterdam.nl

Twentysix coffeeshops in downtown Amsterdam must close their doors within three to six years.

So says the final version of a plan developed by Coalition Project 1012 as presented to the Amsterdam town council.

The vast majority of coffeeshops that will close down are located in and around the Red Light District. After September 2009, owners of these establishments will get a one-time 3-year extension of their current operating license.

According to the Municipality of Amsterdam the large number of coffeeshops in the center of town create an infrastructure that encourages criminality.

The City refers to such establishments as ‘crimogene‘ — a term used to describe functions that encourage ‘promotion or advancement of — or susceptibility to — criminality.’

For instance, while coffeeshops are licensed to legally sell soft drugs, it is technically illegal for them to buy their stock.

Tighter rules, new laws and increased police vigilance made it much more difficult for small-time growers to operate; a situation that has allowed organized crime to muscle in on the supply chain.

Coordinated Approach to Crime

Coalition Project 1012 — named after the postal code covering Amsterdam’s city center — is designed to clean up ‘the entrance to the city’ and to take back control over the area from what one alderman referred to as ‘riff-raff.’

The project is Amsterdam’s response to an official report that documented the growing power and influence of organized over downtown Amsterdam.

In 1997 the city appointed a Red Light District manager charged with the development of a methodology for the administrative approach to organized crime. In 2000 this resulted in the formation of the Van Traa Project. This project takes a multi-agency approach in which police, the public prosecutors deparment, tax authorities — but also housing corporations and private real estate agencies partner in an integrated approach to maintaining law and order.

The Van Traa Project is headed by a small team — the Van Traa Team — which coordinates all activities. The team consists of a team manager, legal advisers, and information specialists.

Among other things, the Van Traa Team implements the BIBOB act, which allows municipalities to screen companies and individuals who apply or re-apply for business licenses. The screening is intended to determine whether or not the individual or business has any connections with organized crime. If and when such connections are found, the municipality has legal grounds on which to deny or withdraw business permits.

An official report by the Van Traa Team documented serious problems in the Red Light District and immediate surrounding areas. Those problems ranged from money laundering to human trafficking, and from housing speculation to slavery and other abuses — most of it connected to organized crime.

To a large extend Coalition Project 1012 was established in response to the Van Traa report. The project is intended to break the criminal infrastructure, to diminish the size and and concentration of “crimogene functions”, to stop and combat the general degradation of the area, and to transform the entire area into a high-quality, diverse ‘Red Carpet’ into the city.

The project, which oversees co-operation between private enterprise, police, the tax authorities and the municipality, addresses not just coffeeshops, but also prostitution, the large concentration of low-quality and/or nuisance producing businesses (e.g. gambling halls, shady mini-supermarkets, discount calling stores), massage parlors and hole-in-the-wall snackbars).
Coffeeshops

Currently Amsterdam has 228 coffeeshops — establishments where one can legally buy and use soft drugs. Of the 141 coffeeshops in the Centrum borough, 76 are located in the 1012 postal code. The latter number will be reduced to 50.

The Coalition Project 1012 plan states the reason for the closures is that the large concentration of coffeeshops in a small area, in combination with many other crimogene functions form a blockade for the project’s central goal of breaking the underlying criminal infrastructure.

The decision on which coffeeshops will lose their operating licenses is based on two criteria: the project’s overall plan of approach to certain streets, and the need to improve the most dilapidated areas.

Since the coffeeshops are currently licensed as Horeca III or IV businesses, owners can elect to change their establishments into other horeca functions.

The Coalition Project 1012 plan says it wants to make clear it does not consider owners of these coffeeshops to be criminals, or that the establishments are the scene of large-scale criminal activities. At the same time, the plan makes clear why it is necessary to reduce the number of coffeeshops in the area.

Both the people behind the project and the municipality of Amsterdam make clear they do not intend to get rid of all coffeeshops.

That said, another twelve coffeeshops may have to close because they are located too close to schools. Initially it was said as many as 43 coffeeshops had to close down for that reason.

Source

Posted: Wed 20th May 2009 09:47 am
by doobydave
According to the Municipality of Amsterdam the large number of coffeeshops in the center of town create an infrastructure that encourages criminality.
It's the Dutch's ridiculous back-door policy that is the biggest contributor to this criminality.


edit - The coffeshops should start paying their taxes to a third party until the government fixes this problem.

Posted: Wed 20th May 2009 11:02 am
by stew1974
How are they going to decide which 26 shops to close? Will it be a lottery or the shops that pay the least taxes. I don't understand this move. Surely it just moves the "problems" elsewhere. Demand will remain the same so trying to cut down the supply will just move things underground into a more criminal world.

Posted: Wed 20th May 2009 11:04 am
by USbongLord
keep going...holland was a nice place to vivit

Posted: Wed 20th May 2009 11:18 am
by Clayman
man this sorta thing saddens me. i had no idea before recently about how the MJ scene was being challenged over there. most americans view holland as this wonderland thats constantly more and more progressive on the subject of cannabis. its a shame that even in the most relaxed weed environments there is still pressure.

i thought the same thing about jamaica. and its not the same at all. but my mom was there and a cannabis farmer was showing her his field, and then pointed out that a low flying plane was almost certainly american DEA. apparently my government likes to spy on them daily to see if they're shipping the weed out to the US

Posted: Wed 20th May 2009 12:30 pm
by cattales1960
that saddens me also. dang.

Posted: Wed 20th May 2009 04:04 pm
by redeyed
ouch looks like the perfect excuse for all the other naysayer countries in the eu to dismiss cannabis out of hand for legalisation and / or regulation.If it dies in the Netherlands what hope do we have of any other country legalising?slim to none.This along with the limburg "members only" system have serious implications for us all. :(
Starting to look like the writing is on the wall for legalisation.

Posted: Wed 20th May 2009 11:52 pm
by Kingdoc
It looks like death row then for some of the bigger names! ie bluebird & hill street blues for a start :cry:,Ps do you have the list of the places affected?.

Posted: Thu 21st May 2009 03:31 am
by xxxcronicxxx
Clayman wrote:man this sorta thing saddens me. i had no idea before recently about how the MJ scene was being challenged over there. most americans view holland as this wonderland thats constantly more and more progressive on the subject of cannabis. its a shame that even in the most relaxed weed environments there is still pressure.

i thought the same thing about jamaica. and its not the same at all. but my mom was there and a cannabis farmer was showing her his field, and then pointed out that a low flying plane was almost certainly american DEA. apparently my government likes to spy on them daily to see if they're shipping the weed out to the US
This is the New world order of things, 1 world goverment, 1 world currency, 1 fucking world order, all place's around the world will be run in the same or similar way.
Redeyed you are spot on, when u say this has serious implications for us all. As things are changing rapidly all around us no matter were in the world you are living, and it all boils down to the same thing of social control and dominace over all. :evil:
Good over evil :mrgreen:

Posted: Thu 21st May 2009 04:43 am
by TwoCanucks
At some point it would stand to reason the gov will come up with a myriad of excuses for different shops to close.

I think they just don't have the balls to close them all at once because the tourism will take a huge hit.

That said, this is just the next step to the eventual eradication of all shops in Netherlands.

Re: 26 coffeeshops in downtown Amsterdam must close their do

Posted: Fri 22nd May 2009 10:50 am
by DutchAmsterdam
Puffin13 wrote:26 coffeeshops in downtown Amsterdam must close their doors
May 19, 2009
© DutchAmsterdam.nl
Puffin13...

At DutchAmsterdam.nl we go out of our way to provide quality content.

We like the fact that you appear to appreciate our efforts, but we don't like it when our copyright is violated -- as is the case when you post an entire article, regardless of whether or not you include the © dingbat.

Please, in the future simply quote 2-5 sentences and provide a link back. That's how the internet works.

Doing so keeps you and the website you post on out of trouble (see Copyscape).

It would also motivate us to continue posting original content on the topic.

As for the Amsterdam Coffeeshop Directory, we like the site. It's the best one of the topic :)

Regards,

Anton
DutchAmsterdam.nl

Re: 26 coffeeshops in downtown Amsterdam must close their do

Posted: Fri 22nd May 2009 10:54 am
by USbongLord
DutchAmsterdam wrote:
Puffin13 wrote:26 coffeeshops in downtown Amsterdam must close their doors
May 19, 2009
© DutchAmsterdam.nl
Puffin13...

At DutchAmsterdam.nl we go out of our way to provide quality content.

We like the fact that you appear to appreciate our efforts, but we don't like it when our copyright is violated -- as is the case when you post an entire article, regardless of whether or not you include the © dingbat.

Please, in the future simply quote 2-5 sentences and provide a link back. That's how the internet works.

Doing so keeps you and the website you post on out of trouble (see Copyscape).

It would also motivate us to continue posting original content on the topic.

As for the Amsterdam Coffeeshop Directory, we like the site. It's the best one of the topic :)

Regards,

Anton
DutchAmsterdam.nl
hehehehe...whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa...hehehe....the internet says were in troubles..lol...ill shut up now,,,dingbat..and thank you for liking the site..i was worried

Posted: Fri 22nd May 2009 11:32 am
by DutchAmsterdam
Kingdoc wrote:Ps do you have the list of the places affected?.
The most recent public report does not list the coffeeshops by name, but it does list the streets -- and number of coffeeshops in those streets -- that are affected:

Damstraat (1)
Lange Niezel (3)
Nieuwebrugsteeg (1)
Nieuwendijk (4)
Oude Hoogstraat (3)
Oudebrugsteeg (2)
Oudekerksplein (1)
Warmoesstraat (10)
Wijde Kerksteeg (1)

Anton
DutchAmsterdam.nl

Re: 26 coffeeshops in downtown Amsterdam must close their do

Posted: Fri 22nd May 2009 11:33 am
by sh@dy
DutchAmsterdam wrote:
Puffin13 wrote:26 coffeeshops in downtown Amsterdam must close their doors
May 19, 2009
© DutchAmsterdam.nl
Puffin13...

At DutchAmsterdam.nl we go out of our way to provide quality content.

We like the fact that you appear to appreciate our efforts, but we don't like it when our copyright is violated -- as is the case when you post an entire article, regardless of whether or not you include the © dingbat.

Please, in the future simply quote 2-5 sentences and provide a link back. That's how the internet works.

Doing so keeps you and the website you post on out of trouble (see Copyscape).

It would also motivate us to continue posting original content on the topic.

As for the Amsterdam Coffeeshop Directory, we like the site. It's the best one of the topic :)

Regards,

Anton
DutchAmsterdam.nl
you know this post wont bring you any sympathy ;)
still I can understand it and I think Puffin will do so in the futute :)

Posted: Fri 22nd May 2009 11:36 am
by Boner
To be fair Puffin always puts a source link in his threads.