The Province

Meet the man in charge of cannabis sales

Tan says online orders are being picked, packed and shipped within one business day

- KATIE DEROSA

VICTORIA — Before Michael Tan was hired to oversee cannabis sales for the B.C. government, he borrowed a hoodie from his 17-year-old son and stood outside a Vancouver pot shop.

The former retail executive then surveyed about 100 recreation­al cannabis-users to get their take on legalizati­on.

“The biggest take-away was that consumers thought the government was going to take the fun out of pot and that the government would ‘mess it up,’ ” said Tan, executive director of cannabis operations for B.C.’s Liquor Distributi­on Branch since May.

“I wanted to make sure their concerns weren’t realized.”

Since Canada legalized recreation­al marijuana on Oct. 17, thousands have opted to buy their pot through the mail. In one month, the B.C. Cannabis online store saw 34,000 transactio­ns.

Tan declined to disclose the value of those transactio­ns, but said orders are being processed with Amazon-level efficiency. Cannabis is picked, packed and shipped within one business day, said Tan, who was speaking from the branch’s 60,000-square-foot distributi­on warehouse in Richmond.

B.C. Cannabis, the brand for government-sold cannabis, has only one brick-andmortar store, in Kamloops, and just two private cannabis shops have been approved by the branch. Another 289 applicatio­ns are in progress.

The majority of Victoria’s two dozen cannabis dispensari­es have shut their doors as they wait for provincial licences.

Victoria cannabis industry insider James Whitehead, who has sold his Medijuana chain of dispensari­es, said private cannabis retailers are frustrated by the slow bureaucrat­ic process.

“(The government) says: ‘We’re going to let you guys participat­e in the new economy of it, but you have to stop everything you’re doing and start over and play by the rules.’ So (cannabis retail owners) shut down even though they know it’s hurting their patients, even though they have to lay off all their staff, even though they’re shutting down developed businesses that they spent five years building, to try to comply,” Whitehead said.

“And then the government is not coming forward with the licences.”

To make things worse, he said, only one government store was ready by Oct. 17.

Tan said he knows people are anxiously awaiting more stores, but said there’s a host of logistics that must fall into place. That includes finding the right location and then working with the municipal government to meet zoning requiremen­ts.

Each municipali­ty can set its own rules on where pot shops can operate, and some — including Saanich, Sidney, Colwood, Metchosin and Oak Bay — have altered their zoning bylaws to exclude them completely.

“We are involved in discussion­s with many, many local government­s and I think we’ll start seeing more and more stores coming around,” Tan said.

Tan is well-aware of the cannabis supply shortages that have forced government stores in New Brunswick, Quebec and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador to shut their stores or reduce hours.

“There are countrywid­e supply issues simply because licensed producers are only capable of fulfilling a portion of everyone’s initial orders,” he said.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Executive director of cannabis operations for B.C.’s Liquor Distributi­on Branch, Michael Tan, surveyed recreation­al cannabis users to learn of their concerns and ensure they were not realized.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Executive director of cannabis operations for B.C.’s Liquor Distributi­on Branch, Michael Tan, surveyed recreation­al cannabis users to learn of their concerns and ensure they were not realized.

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