Medicine Hat News

Nine hopeful pot stores await fate

- COLLIN GALLANT cgallant@medicineha­tnews.com Twitter: CollinGall­ant

Nine potential pot retailers in Medicine Hat are expected to appear at the city’s planning commission meeting next week in a bid to be operating when the substance is decriminal­ized on Oct. 17.

A federal move to regulate recreation­al use among adults has caused a rush of sorts — according to those in the industry — to be the first on the block, so to speak.

One longtime local cannabis advocate however, is pressing pause on a plan to convert her head shop on S. Railway Street until more is known about the industry and regulation­s are smoothed out.

Pattie Vivier has operated Hemp Town Rock for the past eight years, selling general merchandis­e, bongs and vapourizer­s, and clothing made from hemp — but not marijuana.

New provincial rules would bar the sale of clothing at locations where cannabis is sold. Cannabis is mandated to specialize­d, stand-alone locations. Right now, she told the

News, there are too many questions and the complicate­d process has offered too few answers.

“I’m still going ahead with licensing — I’m on the path — but I wouldn’t open until the new year,” said Vivier. “I don’t know how you can start a business when you don’t know what the product is worth, what you can sell it for, or what product you’re getting.

“All that needs to be answered.”

A list of nine applicatio­ns in a first round of discretion­ary use hearings will be examined at the Aug. 22 meeting of the municipal planning commission, which convenes at 2:30 p.m. in council chambers at city hall.

Four are located in a twoblock radius in the eastern edge of downtown. Two show addresses in the Southwest Light Industrial area, and one each are on Dunmore Road, Kingsway Avenue and the east end of S. Railway Street.

As many at 16 applicatio­ns with local addresses appeared on a list posted by the Alberta Gaming and Liquor Commission for potential objections by neighbours over the past six months.

The AGLC applicatio­n process, which began this winter, requires licences to be compliant with local bylaws that in many cases hadn’t been written at that point.

Now, applicants have reapplied to the AGLC after Medicine Hat passed zoning rules last month. They also need developmen­t permits to further the provincial process, and to have locations upgraded to meet AGLC standards.

Redcliff mulls shop

Town planners in Redcliff have announced they will hold an open house for community members to learn about a proposal by Cana Cabana to open a cannabis retail store in that town’s light industrial district.

The company hopes to convert a bay at 631 S. Railway Dr. NE to sell cannabis, and will answer questions about the project at the German Canadian Harmony Hall on Aug. 29. The applicatio­n will be heard at the town’s planning commission meeting Sept. 19.

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