Calgary Herald

NDP government has yet to decide exactly how it will retail pot to public

- JAMES WOOD jwood@postmedia.com

Premier Rachel Notley won’t say which way her NDP government is leaning when it comes to sales of legal cannabis, but she insists the province is carefully weighing the merits of both the public and private sector options.

Under its policy framework unveiled last week, the NDP will allow recreation­al marijuana to be sold only in stand-alone stores once it is legalized next year, but the government is still weighing whether to set up a system of government owned and operated stores, or leave retail to the private sector.

Speaking to reporters Friday in Calgary, Notley said the govern- ment has reached no conclusion on what she called “a big decision,” and said there are numerous factors at play in its deliberati­ons.

“One of the issues there to balance is public safety and quality control in terms of keeping the product going to the people who should legally have it, versus getting it out the door as quickly as we can,” she said.

“Going the route of the private sector meets the latter objective, going the route of the publiclyma­naged system — it might be argued — meets the former.”

Notley acknowledg­ed that tight timelines are also an issue in the government’s choice.

The federal Liberal government has set July 1, 2018, for meeting its promise of legalized recreation­al cannabis and the NDP government intends to decide on the vehicle for retail sales ahead of presenting legislatio­n in the fall sitting of the legislatur­e, which starts at the end of this month.

The premier said the level of potential financial support from Ottawa also weighs on the decision.

Alberta, which has not had public liquor stores since privatizat­ion in the 1990s, would face the risk of substantia­l upfront costs in setting up government-owned cannabis stores, though they could end up bringing in more public revenue in the long run, says the government.

On the other hand, it acknowledg­es a private retail system would likely be more flexible in meeting consumer demand and would provide more economic opportunit­ies to small business.

The province’s three main op- position parties have called for the private sector to be responsibl­e for cannabis sales and there are numerous companies poised to enter the retail marijuana market in Alberta if it is allowed.

Jason Kujath, the president of 51st Parallel Life Sciences — a company aiming to both produce and sell cannabis in Alberta when the product is legalized — said there is significan­t concern that the Notley government will choose the public model for retail.

“It won’t create the access that wipes out the black market,” he said in an interview Friday.

“Second, in a time when Alberta needs to ... foster entreprene­urship and create jobs and do so in an economic activity environmen­t, it doesn’t make sense to invest (public) money to set up infrastruc­ture here.”

Kujath estimates setting up a system of government owned and operated cannabis stores would cost around $1.2 billion.

One of the main proponents of a public system, the Alberta Federation of Labour, has said that government owned stores would create higher-quality jobs with unionized staff and would be safer for employees and the public.

The executive of the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees is considerin­g whether to allow an emergency resolution on cannabis sales to be debated at its annual convention in Edmonton next week, an AUPE spokesman confirmed Friday.

It doesn’t make sense to invest (public) money to set up infrastruc­ture here.

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