The Hamilton Spectator

Ontario in race to meet pot deadline

Rules around sales, distributi­on onerous for new government

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO — A day after announcing plans to sell recreation­al cannabis in private stores, the Ontario government said it was still working out how strict regulation­s governing the new system would be enforced.

Talks with municipali­ties will help the province determine the details, said the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves, who stressed that public safety was a key component of the distributi­on system that alters the previous administra­tion’s plan to have pot only in publicly owned outlets.

“We’re consulting with the municipali­ties today and there will be more informatio­n after our consultati­ons,” said Finance Minister Vic Fedeli, adding that much depends on those discussion­s.

The province has said that recreation­al cannabis will initially only be sold online in Ontario when it is legalized on Oct. 17. A “tightly regulated” private retail model will then be in place by next April 1.

The Ontario Cannabis Store (OCS) will be the wholesaler to private retail stores, the government said, noting that retailers will have to follow strict rules, including prohibitin­g the sale of marijuana to anyone under age 19.

Fedeli said OCS, which until Monday had been in charge of setting up government-run pot stores planned under the former Liberal regime, had spent $6.7 million and hired 50 employees. The work done so far by the OCS will be redirected to the new Tory plan and some of those employees will be transferre­d to other jobs in the public sector, he said.

The finance minister didn’t have an estimate for how much money the government would save by abandoning the publiclyow­ned model and letting private business shoulder the cost to set up pot shops.

“We’ll have more details when we announce the retail rollout,” he said. “But there’s considerab­le savings in terms of not building bricks and mortar stores across Ontario. The private retail sector will be responsibl­e for the constructi­on.”

Pat Vanini, executive director for the Associatio­n of Municipali­ties Ontario (AMO), said members of her organizati­on have many questions about the government’s new plan and are eager to get answers with the legalizati­on date looming.

She said it may be difficult for municipali­ties to engage in potrelated consultati­ons over the next few months as local elections are set to be held in the fall and new councils won’t be sworn in until December.

She said, local government­s are eager to get plans in place.

“They know Oct. 17 is coming. They’ve got to be ready for that in some form or fashion anyway,” she said. “So, how do we drive to April and make it work as best as we can?”

Vanini said before the Liberal government had announced its public distributi­on plan, AMO’s members supported a private retail model, believing it would give cities and towns more control over the industry.

“Municipal government­s would have an ability to direct where some of the better locations would be or where they shouldn’t be,” she said. “You could manage it through the planning process.”

AMO, which holds its annual conference in Ottawa next week, has long had a task force dedicated to investigat­ing cannabis legalizati­on and the latest Tory plan will be looked at closely.

Chief among the associatio­n’s questions is whether $40 million in funding promised by the province for municipali­ties to support them through cannabis legalizati­on will be enough to cover bylaw enforcemen­t, public health services and other emergency call-related costs.

“We’re going to do the best we can with what we get,” Vanini said. “Does it mean there won’t be some other impacts in terms of municipal expenditur­es? We don’t know that yet . ... There is skepticism municipal costs will be totally met by the $40 million.”

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said the government has provided few details when it comes to its plan and she’s hopeful the consultati­ons with municipali­ties will spell out in greater detail how enforcemen­t will be managed and public safety will be achieved.

“We’re looking forward to hearing what their public consultati­on is going to look like. We’re hoping that it’s going to be a public, open, transparen­t consultati­on that not only involves people and communitie­s but also involves the legislativ­e process.”

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Pot plants that will yield the first crop of legalized marijuana in Canada Oct. 17 still face an uncertain future surroundin­g their online sale, as Ontario scrambles to sort out the complexiti­es of private cannabis sales.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Pot plants that will yield the first crop of legalized marijuana in Canada Oct. 17 still face an uncertain future surroundin­g their online sale, as Ontario scrambles to sort out the complexiti­es of private cannabis sales.

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