The Niagara Falls Review

Canada’s marijuana industry so hot it’s importing workers

- KRISTINE OWRAM

It was midsummer, less than three months before Canada legalized recreation­al marijuana, and Vic Neufeld had a problem.

The chief executive officer of Aphria Inc. had just hired 50 people to work in the pot producer’s greenhouse in Leamington, Ont. and by the end of the first week all but eight had quit.

“Those are really hot, humid months and working in a greenhouse, as much cooling and airflow as we can provide, is still pretty darn hot in July and August,” Neufeld said in a phone interview. A lack of qualified local labour forced Aphria to dispose of almost 14,000 cannabis plants in the quarter ended Aug. 31 after they weren’t harvested in time, costing it nearly $1 million. Since then, the company has doubled the staff at its Aphria One greenhouse thanks in part to Canada’s Seasonal Agricultur­e Worker Program, which has allowed it to hire about 50 temporary workers from the Caribbean and Guatemala with plans to bring in up to 100 more.

Aphria’s experience underscore­s the swelling demand for labour in Canada’s five-year-old cannabis sector, where openings have tripled in the past year to 34 out of every 10,000 job postings, according to employment search engine Indeed.com.

Canada’s licensed producers employed about 2,400 workers at the end of 2017, according to Statistics Canada, and BMO Capital Markets estimated that industry employment was around 3,500 people when legalizati­on took effect. Between them, eight of Canada’s largest cannabis companies are actively recruiting for approximat­ely 1,700 positions, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Many companies say they expect that number to grow as they expand production facilities after Canada legalized recreation­al marijuana in October.

There’s been a spike in postings for jobs at cannabis growers and retailers. And next year will see even more demand for labour as Canada expands the number of legal cannabis products to include edibles and concentrat­es, said Alison McMahon, founder and CEO of Cannabis At Work.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Staff work in a cannabis grow room that can be viewed at the new visitors centre at Canopy Growth’s Tweed facility in Smiths Falls, Ont.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS Staff work in a cannabis grow room that can be viewed at the new visitors centre at Canopy Growth’s Tweed facility in Smiths Falls, Ont.

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