The Prince George Citizen

Why liquor stores need to sell pot

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he B.C. NDP government tipped its hand Tuesday on how it plans to regulate the legal sale of marijuana.

Besides setting the age at 19 to buy, possess and consume pot, similar to alcohol and tobacco, the province said the B.C. Liquor Distributi­on Branch will be the sole supplier, distributi­ng pot to private and public stores in the same manner it already does with booze.

The government didn’t address exactly who will sell pot but it looks like the NDP will take a different tack from the model already laid out in Ontario, where legal pot will only be available in about 150 stores, all operated by that province’s liquor control board. There, current private retail pot sales operations will be illegal and pot will be sold only in stand-alone storefront­s, separate from alcohol.

Hopefully in B.C., the unnecessar­y duplicatio­n and mistrust of the private sector in the Ontario plan will be ignored.

The path forward that the NDP seems to be suggesting is to simply use the existing alcohol infrastruc­ture to not only control supply and distributi­on but also to look after sales.

In other words, the public B.C. liquor stores, along with the private liquor outlets, will be the sole retail sources of legal pot. They already have existing licences to sell safe and legally-produced intoxicant­s to adult consumers and their staff and management already operate with the best practices to keep those products out of the hands of minors.

At least out of the gate, private pot dispensari­es can’t provide that oversight and, as in Ontario, they will need to be closed down. That doesn’t mean that option can’t be explored later but for now, it’s the best way to ensure safe, legal pot from legitimate production facilities (not illegal grow operations with proceeds to organized crime) is sold strictly to adults.

Allowing existing liquor stores to sell pot will also protect their business.

The Washington Post reported this week on the work of university researcher­s who have found a 15 per cent decline in alcohol sales in states where medical marijuana is easily accessible. The study suggests that the legalizati­on of pot for recreation­al use could take an even bigger bite out of liquor sales.

These findings should hardly come as a surprise. An increase in the number of intoxicant­s in the marketplac­e doesn’t mean that people will increase their spending on intoxicant­s. And this is just one study, as the Post article points out.

Other research has show little effect while others have found the easier access to pot has actually increased alcohol sales and consumptio­n.

So it’s simply too soon to say but common sense would suggest that when there’s a new product on the market, some will spend money to give that a try while devoting less cash to their previous brand.

Significan­tly, pot also has a lot going for it.

There’s no such thing as pot poisoning but excessive amounts of alcohol can kill you, in both the short and long terms.

Alcoholism is a real and terrible illness but a boatload of research shows pot doesn’t trigger addictive behaviour. Every- body knows someone who has too many drinks and wants to fight or do something really stupid (“hey, hold my beer º watch this!”). Pot, meanwhile, brings on silly conversati­ons, the unstoppabl­e giggles and, as the Eagles would sing, a “peaceful easy feeling.”

Of course, pot does have some real and significan­t effects, as Todd Whitcombe pointed out in a recent column, but nowhere near the issues that come with alcohol consumptio­n.

Along with the various ways to consume pot – for those who don’t like to smoke, there are both edible products and THC pills – there is the cost factor. If getting a bang for the buck is important, pot is cheaper than alcohol and less of it is required to be intoxicate­d.

As a result, some adults who once relied exclusivel­y on alcohol as a fun and games lubricant will inevitably switch to legalized pot, especially as the social stigma around its use further evaporates.

Allowing liquor stores to also sell pot would keep those businesses healthy and profitable, make it easier for government to oversee distributi­on and sale and give adults a one-stop shopping option to pick their poison.

— Editor-in-chief Neil Godbout

The path forward that the NDP seems to be suggesting is to simply use the existing alcohol infrastruc­ture to not only control supply and distributi­on but also to look after sales.

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