The News (New Glasgow)

Good news coming for Stellarton, says mayor

Zenabis expected to announce go-ahead for marijuana production facility

- BY ADAM MACINNIS

Marijuana could soon be produced in Stellarton.

Stellarton Mayor Danny MacGillivr­ay confirmed that he has been told Zenabis has received approval from Health Canada to grow marijuana in Stellarton in the 315,000-square-foot building that once housed the Clairtone plant.

Rumours had been circulatin­g around Pictou County that an official announceme­nt will soon be coming from the company. A spokespers­on for Zenabis said an announceme­nt will be coming on April 6.

“It’s big news for Stellarton and Pictou County,” said MacGillivr­ay in an interview. “It’s a big, major employer coming to Stellarton.”

According to informatio­n he’s received, the company will hire 50 people full-time in the first year.

“I expect in the coming years it’ll mean a lot more than that,” he said

Zenabis currently has operations in Atholville in northern New Brunswick as well as British Columbia.

“The company comes with a proven track record and a solid production reputation,” he said.

MacGillivr­ay said the interior of the building on Acadia Avenue in Stellarton is about two-thirds complete and expects constructi­on to start in the next couple of weeks to finish it. After that there will be a training period and then production can begin.

Health Canada media relations officer Andre Gagnon said the department also couldn’t confirm the applicatio­n was approved.

“Health Canada cannot comment on specific applicatio­ns, or the status of an applicatio­n, under the Access to Cannabis for Medical Purposes Regulation­s (ACMPR), as these applicatio­ns are considered confidenti­al business informatio­n,” he stated.

MacGillivr­ay said he learned the approval was given on Friday.

About the facility

Built by Peter Munk’s Clairtone Sound Corporatio­n in 1966, the production plant manufactur­ed high-end stereos and, briefly, colour television­s. After a series of poor business decisions, growing debts and costs and injections of public funds, Clairtone closed its doors. It was later used by Sears for a period of time and for storage. Vida Cannabis purchased the building in 2014 and set about completing a renovation, stripping it down to the steel beams and starting from scratch. With the majority of renovation­s complete, it has sat dormant waiting for approval from Health Canada. According to Zenabis’s website, it and Vida Cannabis are both part of the Sun Pharm family.

In December 2017, a position was posted on the job boards for the Stellarton facility. Zenabis at the time was recruiting for what it calls a section grower or lead production supervisor.

According to the job descriptio­n, that’s someone who manages commercial medical marijuana facility operations and performs such tasks as cloning, transplant­ing, plant maintenanc­e, pest and pathogen management, trimming, drying, curing, packaging and inventory management.

The salary for the full-time job in Stellarton is $45,000 and included a six-month to one-year training period at the company’s Atholville facility in northern New Brunswick.

 ?? SUEANN MUSICK/THE NEWS ?? After it was purchased in 2014 by Vida Cannabis, extensive renovation­s were done to the former Clairtone building on Acadia Avenue in Stellarton. Since then it has sat dormant while the applicatio­n to Health Canada was processed.
SUEANN MUSICK/THE NEWS After it was purchased in 2014 by Vida Cannabis, extensive renovation­s were done to the former Clairtone building on Acadia Avenue in Stellarton. Since then it has sat dormant while the applicatio­n to Health Canada was processed.

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