The Niagara Falls Review

Former TD Bank CEO to head up Ontario pot agency

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO — Ontario has called in its top business guru to head the agency that will handle the complicate­d task of selling and distributi­ng recreation­al marijuana once pot is legalized this summer.

Former TD Bank CEO Ed Clark, who has served as Premier Kathleen Wynne’s business adviser since 2015, was nominated Thursday by Finance Minister Charles Sousa to chair the Liquor Control Board of Ontario’s board of directors.

Clark, who also is working on the province’s bid to land the new Amazon headquarte­rs, will oversee the agency as it creates a subsidiary that will run stand-alone stores to sell legal weed.

The process is likely to be fraught with challenges from municipal pushback to concerns about lack of supply, but Sousa said Clark’s experience makes him the ideal person for the job.

When Clark served as CEO of TD Bank from 2002 to 2014 he focused on the financial institutio­n’s retail operations and customer relations, the government said Thursday.

“He’s a retailer by his nature,” Sousa said. “But he’s also a policy mind. He’s successful. He has the ability to deal very effectivel­y with leaders around the world and we’ve engaged him to do just that on our behalf.”

Clark’s appointmen­t as LCBO chairman was discussed by Ontario’s cabinet Thursday morning and will now be finalized after a review by a committee at Queen’s Park.

The province announced last fall that it plans to create a subsidiary of the Liquor Control Board of Ontario that will run the legal weed stores. The agency itself will oversee the planning process to establish its retail locations.

The province plans to set up approximat­ely 150 standalone cannabis stores by 2020 with the first wave of 40 stores opening this summer.

Clark has handled a number of difficult files for Ontario’s Liberal government in recent years, leading a controvers­ial government asset review in 2014 which recommende­d the partial selloff of Hydro One. In 2015, Clark advised the province on the restructur­ing of U.S. Steel Canada in Hamilton. In 2016, he conducted a review of the province’s digital health records system.

For his work, Clark has taken a salary of one dollar per year, something that Sousa joked won’t change.

“As you know he’s been advising and providing some support for the government on a number files and he has been getting his dollar,” Sousa said. “I don’t intend to give him a raise.”

Ontario NDP Finance Critic John Vanthof panned Clark’s hiring saying it sends the signal that the LCBO could be privatized. He urged the premier to cancel Clark’s nomination to the board.

“By appointing Clark to the top post at the LCBO, Wynne is sending strong signals that she won’t stop with the selloff of Hydro One,” Vanthof said in a statement. “Ontarians overwhelmi­ngly opposed that short-sighted move, but Wynne went ahead with her plan anyway, and Ontario families are literally paying the price.”

Ontario Public Service Employees Union President Warren (Smokey) Thomas also called on Wynne to rescind Clark’s appointmen­t.

“Ed Clark has always put profits before people,” Thomas said in a statement. “Giving him the keys to the LCBO will be a huge boon for Bay Street, but it’s going to cause real harm on Main Street.”

Sousa denied Clark’s hiring signals a move to privatize the Crown corporatio­n. Clark himself recommende­d hanging onto the LCBO in his review of government assets, he said.

“There is no intent on selling LCBO,” he said. “It’s a very efficient, very productive, well-run organizati­on. It’s valuation is tremendous.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Former TD Bank CEO Ed Clark is set to become the next chairman of the Liquor Control Board of Ontario, a Crown corporatio­n tasked with selling and distributi­ng recreation­al marijuana once it’s legalized this summer.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Former TD Bank CEO Ed Clark is set to become the next chairman of the Liquor Control Board of Ontario, a Crown corporatio­n tasked with selling and distributi­ng recreation­al marijuana once it’s legalized this summer.

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