Edmonton Journal

Calgary pot retailer may seek police help on Day 1

- BILL KAUFMANN REGULATORY HEADWINDS BKaufmann@postmedia.com Twitter: @BillKaufma­nnjrn

Jeff Mooij said he might have to enlist the help of city police to sell pot when he opens one of Calgary’s first two cannabis stores the day the plant goes legal.

The veteran medical marijuana consultant said his company’s location at Macleod Trail and Southland Drive S.W. could be one of only two Calgary recreation­al cannabis retailers to be fully approved by city and provincial officials in time to welcome customers Oct. 17.

That means there’s sure to be a historic green rush at the shop in the Southland Crossing strip mall, said Mooij.

“It’s going to be crazy, a lineup all day long — I might have to have police directing traffic,” said Mooij who heads up Four20 Premium Market.

“I’m going to be a major drug dealer now, I’m opening up a store on the first day of legalizati­on.”

The Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis (AGLC) announced Thursday there will be 17 stores opening across the province on Oct. 17.

The AGLC said it expects to sanction 250 stores in Alberta over the next year.

AGLC officials inspected Mooij’s site Sept. 24 and issued an interim licence soon after, allowing the store to accept product and begin selling it Oct. 17.

Mooij said he’s ordered $420,000 worth of bud and oils from up to 15 licensed suppliers to stock the 4,000-square-foot store.

“That’s $1 million worth of retail … anything available we took,” he said.

“We won’t run out in the first week, but I hope we do.”

A company celebratio­n to mark the occasion that’ll include business associates has already been planned at a nearby pizza restaurant, said Mooij.

But Four20 Premium Market, like its rivals, still faces plenty of regulatory headwinds before any more stores can open.

The company faces no fewer than six appeals of its city-approved Calgary locations, of which it ultimately hopes to have 10.

Nearly 100 appeals have been launched, challengin­g the city ’s approvals and refusals of the stores.

“We could have had two cleared for Oct. 17 with another one in the Foothills Industrial Park but inspectors couldn’t be there in time,” said Mooij.

That pace isn’t necessaril­y a bad thing in such uncharted waters, said Brad Rogers, president of Ontario-based CannTrust, one of 15 cannabis producers chosen by the province to supply the Alberta market.

“We should be looking for a nice, controlled way to have it roll out, it’s a measured end to prohibitio­n,” said Rogers, whose company is gearing up to produce 100,000 kg of weed at its Niagara-area growing facility by late 2019 or early 2020.

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