The Daily Courier

Proposed edible pot rules draw fire from producers

Critics say rules wasteful, would leave products tasteless

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VANCOUVER — Canada’s proposed edible pot regulation­s would result in tasteless products wrapped in wasteful packaging, shutting out medical patients and fuelling a continued black market, critics say.

The consultati­on period on the proposed rules ended Wednesday, and Health Canada is now reviewing the responses. Jessika Villano, owner of Buddha Barn dispensary in Vancouver, says she hopes the government genuinely wants her opinion.

“I don’t feel like anybody’s been listening. I feel a little bit deflated, actually,” she said.

When Canada legalized weed last fall, it only allowed fresh or dried bud, oil, plants and seeds. Health Canada released its proposed regulation­s for edibles, extracts and topicals in December and asked for feedback.

The government plans to have regulation­s in place for those products no later than Oct. 17 this year.

Villano said she’s concerned about a number of elements of the proposed regulation­s. A single serving would be limited to 10 milligrams of THC, the psychoacti­ve ingredient in cannabis, and each serving must be individual­ly wrapped.

The rule is more strict than regulation­s in Colorado or Washington, where multiple servings are allowed per package, for example in a chocolate bar demarcated into squares that each contain 10 milligrams.

“I feel that Health Canada is creating an environmen­tal nightmare,” Villano said.

Longtime users who take cannabis to combat pain, stress or nausea use much higher doses, with some cancer patients using up to 650 milligrams per dose, she said. The regulation­s would outlaw higher-dose products and any substitute would be unattainab­ly expensive, she said.

The regulation­s also say the products must not be appealing to youth and the packages can’t advertise dessert or confection­ery flavours. Edibles must also not “encourage over-consumptio­n” and be shelfstabl­e, so no refrigerat­ion.

While there’s nothing in the rules that explicitly outlaws sweet ingredient­s, Villano said she’s worried the restrictio­ns mean brownies, cookies and candies are off limits.

“They’re proposing that we sell sand,” Villano said. “I think a lot of adults would like to have cannabis sugar in their tea.”

Health Canada confirmed the proposed regulation­s would allow a broad range of ingredient­s, including sugar and chocolate, in edible cannabis. However, it said products must not feature ingredient­s, shape, colour, flavours, packaging or labelling that would appeal to youth.

The proposed THC limit for edibles aims to address the key risks of accidental consumptio­n and over-consumptio­n by children and adults, it said, adding the proposed limit for cannabis extracts, such as capsules, is 1,000 milligrams of THC per package.

Department spokeswoma­n Tammy Jarbeau said the requiremen­ts for packaging would attempt to minimize appeal to kids and protect against accidental consumptio­n.

“Health Canada welcomes licensed processors to use innovative and environmen­tally sound packaging approaches, provided the requiremen­ts in the regulation­s are satisfied,” she said in a statement.

Yannick Craigwell’s company, Treatsandt­reats, sells sweet goodies containing up to 220 milligrams of THC to medical patients. His packaging isn’t colourful or bright — it’s simply a black bag with a clear window to show what’s inside and a muffin on the logo. But the proposed regulation­s would not allow a cut-out window nor the advertisin­g of confection­ery flavours.

Craigwell said he hopes Health Canada sets up an office where companies can send their package designs for approval or disapprova­l, because “there’s no way to know” what’s acceptable based on the proposed regulation­s.

He said he had no doubt the black market would persist if the proposed rules are finalized without changes.

“If there’s a need, people are going to fill that need. If there’s a financial reward for filling that need, that’s the whole premise of the black market,” Craigwell said.

Bruce Linton, CEO of Canopy Growth Corp., said the rules aren’t perfect, but they’re very good. His company is developing a caloriefre­e cannabis beverage and he doesn’t see an issue with the 10-milligram limit per serving for drinks.

The one type of product where the limit might be too strict is vape pens, which usually hold a higher dose so they can be used on multiple occasions, he said.

But for the most part, the government is moving forward in a very well-regulated, incrementa­l way, he said, adding it’s easier to increase the allowed dosage later rather than decrease it.

“In the context of how government­s normally work, this is astounding,” Linton said.

“The government of Canada has come up with how you can drink and eat and vape cannabis and are regulating it at a federal level and are selling it through provincial­ly controlled stores. Are you sure we’re not making all this stuff up?”

 ?? Canadian Press file photo ?? Jessika Villano, owner of Buddha Barn Craft Cannabis, says she’s concerned about a number of elements of the proposed regulation­s for edible pot products.
Canadian Press file photo Jessika Villano, owner of Buddha Barn Craft Cannabis, says she’s concerned about a number of elements of the proposed regulation­s for edible pot products.

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