Calgary Herald

How marijuana will be sold: A provincial glance

NOVA SCOTIA AND PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND ARE THE LATEST PROVINCES TO OUTLINE THEIR PLANS FOR THE SALE OF MARIJUANA WITH LEGALIZATI­ON LOOMING JULY 1. HERE IS A GLANCE AT PROVINCIAL AND TERRITORIA­L PLANS TO DATE, MOVING FROM WEST, TO EAST, TO NORTH

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BRITISH COLUMBIA

B.C. has set the age of consumptio­n at 19, with retail sales allowed through both public and private stores. Retailers will have to get their supply of cannabis from the government’s wholesale distributi­on system used for alcohol.

ALBERTA

The province plans to control the online sale of pot, but will leave over- thecounter sales to private operators. Details on how sales would work have yet to be determined. Private pot stores would have to be physically separate from stores that sell alcohol, tobacco or pharmaceut­icals, but how that would be legally defined is also undetermin­ed. Stores would not be allowed to sell anything but cannabis and cannabis-related products.

SASKATCHEW­AN

The province has held a public consultati­on. Saskatchew­an said in its recent throne speech that it will introduce pot legislatio­n once a review is completed this fall.

MANITOBA

Manitoba plans to set its legal age at 19, a year later than the legal age for drinking alcohol. The government’s legislatio­n would also prohibit people from growing cannabis at home for recreation­al purposes. Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries would regulate the sale of cannabis and municipal government­s would have the option to ban sales by referendum.

ONTARIO

The most populous province intends to sell the drug in up to 150 stores run by the Liquor Control Board of Ontario to people 19 and older, with a ban on its consumptio­n in public spaces or workplaces.

QUEBEC

The province has tabled a bill whereby all pot would be sold through the provincial­ly run liquor board, although there is flexibilit­y for exceptions. Quebec plans to open 15 marijuana stores by July 1 and control sales online. The bill also makes it illegal to cultivate pot for personal or commercial use, unless authorized, and limits possession in a home to 150 grams, and to 30 grams on a person. There will also be a zero-tolerance policy for driving under the influence of any drug.

NEW BRUNSWICK

The province will set the minimum age at 19 and require users to lock away their marijuana when it’s in their home. The province announced last month that people would be able to buy marijuana at a subsidiary of the province’s liquor commission.

PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND

P.E.I. has set its legal age at 19, and said it will sell marijuana at standalone outlets run separately by its liquor commission. P.E.I. will allow online sales, and restrict marijuana use to private residences.

NOVA SCOTIA

The government said marijuana will be sold alongside alcohol in its provincial liquor commission stores, and through online sales, to anyone 19 and over. The province accepts federal rules setting a personal possession limit of up to 30 grams, a personal cultivatio­n limit of up to four plants per household and will establish provincial penalties for youth possession of up to five grams.

NFLD. AND LABRADOR

Canada’s newest province will allow sales in private stores with the legal age set at 19. The Crown-owned liquor corporatio­n will oversee the distributi­on to private retailers. Consumptio­n will be restricted to private residences.

YUKON

The territory has proposed 19 as the minimum age for the consumptio­n of recreation­al marijuana, and would limit possession to 30 grams. Its proposals would also allow four plants to be grown per household. The public has until Dec. 20 to comment on the proposed framework, which includes initially limiting distributi­on and sales to government outlets.

NORTHWEST TERRITORIE­S

The government has been holding discussion­s with residents that include community meetings and an online survey, which has garnered a record response for a government online consultati­on tool.

NUNAVUT

Nunavut completed initial stakeholde­r consultati­ons through the summer of 2017 and was holding a public survey to help guide the developmen­t of policy and legislativ­e options.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/ FILES ?? As Canada’s upcoming legalizati­on of marijuana, slated for next July 1, looms closer, the provinces are finalizing their plans for sales and control.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/ FILES As Canada’s upcoming legalizati­on of marijuana, slated for next July 1, looms closer, the provinces are finalizing their plans for sales and control.

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