Regina Leader-Post

ABOUT THOSE MARIJUANA VAULTS...

Health Canada has lifted heavy security regulation­s on growers, but it’s too late for some

- MARK RENDELL

Over the past six months, Damian Kettlewell’s small Vancouverb­ased medical marijuana company, BlissCo, has spent more than $100,000 buying, installing and retrofitti­ng an old HSBC cash-transfer-station vault — complete with a 7,500-lbs. door — in order to satisfy Health Canada’s strict security requiremen­ts for growing cannabis.

On Thursday night, he found out he didn’t need it.

“We’re one of dozens of applicants in a similar situation,” said Kettlewell, after learning that Health Canada was scrapping the expensive security requiremen­t after determinin­g that the old rules “do not align with the existing evidence of risks to public health and safety.”

The move comes after nearly 1,000 Health Canada inspection­s over four years found no evidence that marijuana was being diverted from licensed producers into the black market.

Along with ending the vault requiremen­t, Health Canada also decided to eliminate a rule requiring 24-hour video surveillan­ce inside all growing and harvesting rooms.

The changes are being applauded across the industry for significan­tly lowering the cost of entry for would-be producers. But they do illustrate the risk of a rapidly changing sector.

People “need to skate where the puck is going,” said Dan Sutton, CEO of Tantalus Labs, a Maple Ridge, B.C.-based licensed producer. “If you’re building a cannabis cultivatio­n facility for what the (Access to Cannabis for Medical Purposes Regulation­s) looked like two years ago, you are not going to be able to effectivel­y adapt to a changing regulatory environmen­t that is inevitably going to iterate over time.”

Tantalus built its vault with refrigerat­ion capacity, said Sutton, so it will still be useful for storing products. “The bank door is perhaps the one caveat to all of this. We do have a $15,000 bank vault door that is now a lot less relevant than it was yesterday.”

Sheldon Croome, president and CEO of Atlas Growers Ltd., an LP-applicant near Edmonton with a new $100,000 vault, said that having a vault on site remains a good idea, even if it’s not a requiremen­t.

“We’d be purchasing a vault regardless, just because there’s insurance implicatio­ns,” said Croome, adding that Health Canada’s change to the video surveillan­ce rules could prove even more important over the long term.

“A huge cost of security for most of these LPs, including ourselves, is the servers (needed to store video footage). You have to store so much data — it’s like petabyte storage — it’s expensive,” he said. Atlas is looking at savings of $100,000 a year simply by not recording the inside of grow rooms 24 hours a day, he said.

Since the changes were announced on Thursday, Deepak Anand, vice-president of government relations for consulting company Cannabis Compliance Inc., has been bombarded by calls from clients trying to make sense of the changes. Because Health Canada requires that companies submit detailed blueprints of their facilities, even early-stage LP applicants could end up having to redraw their plans, said Anand.

“Health Canada is by no means saying that this is going to eliminate security, but there are so many ways to go about the program without making these huge capital outlays,” said Anand.

There is “a degree of frustratio­n” among those who had recently invested vaults only to find out they no longer need them, he said. But, he added, the changes are positive, showing that Health Canada is making data-informed decisions and is serious about encouragin­g small producers.

Kettlewell, for his part, admits that the timing is “a little bit unfortunat­e.” But having a vault is a good idea in any case, he said, and Health Canada’s moves point to significan­t progress in the industry.

“For the government to say there’s been no diversion whatsoever, after 1,000 inspection­s, to the black market, that’s a very positive sign and Canadians should feel comfort and confidence that the industry is moving in the right direction,” Kettlewell said.

 ?? TANTALUS LABS ?? Maple Ridge, B.C. pot producer Tantalus Labs spent $15,000 for a bank vault door to comply with Health Canada security regulation­s, which the agency has now scrapped after determinin­g the old rules “do not align with the existing evidence of risks to...
TANTALUS LABS Maple Ridge, B.C. pot producer Tantalus Labs spent $15,000 for a bank vault door to comply with Health Canada security regulation­s, which the agency has now scrapped after determinin­g the old rules “do not align with the existing evidence of risks to...

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