The Telegram (St. John's)

Marijuana market fire sale

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I like to think of the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador economy as a barrel of water. Full is good, empty is bad.

When money changes hands within the province we stir the barrel (which is good, because stagnant water is yucky), but the amount of water in the barrel stays the same. If we add water to the barrel, through things like tourism or selling stuff, our economy — the money circulatin­g in the province — grows. There’s more to go around. Unfortunat­ely, instead of placing our barrel in the rain, our government seems to prefer drilling holes in the bottom; this brings me to legalizati­on.

A whole new market is a whole new opportunit­y. Entreprene­urs are chomping at the bit for a chance to get started. Even if we only grow enough for our own use, that new circulatio­n of money means legitimate work for many. That money circulatin­g through legitimate channels means it’s taxed as well, a few extra dollars in the provincial budget. But for some bizarre reason, our government has given Canopy Growth Corporatio­n, an Ontario company (with Liberal ties), an absurdly sweet deal. Our barrel is getting awfully dry. We don’t need another leak!

Quick summary: 8,000 kilograms of products per year for two years. New $55-million facility in

Newfoundla­nd and Labrador for 12,000 kilograms per year for at least 20 years, “creating” 145 jobs. Oh, and $40 million of that investment they get back through remittance­s.

First of all, Canopy is not “creating” 145 jobs. This rhetoric, used time and again to trick us into raw deals, needs to stop. Big businesses do not “create” jobs, opportunit­y creates jobs. That’s like saying Nestle “creates” water; of course they don’t, they just bottle it. Which anybody can do. If our government could resist panicselli­ng

our opportunit­y, our entreprene­urs would “create” those jobs, as they should.

As for the monopoly, the Canopy sweetheart deal technicall­y allows for small business to operate, but that’s not realistic. Ever play Monopoly? Pro-tip: if one player starts the game with the green monopoly (how appropriat­e), and an extra $200 for passing go for 20 laps, nobody else is going to want to play.

Shane Snook Flat Bay

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Marijuana plants at a Tweed Inc. growing facility in Smiths Falls, Ont. The company was later renamed Canopy Growth Corp.
SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Marijuana plants at a Tweed Inc. growing facility in Smiths Falls, Ont. The company was later renamed Canopy Growth Corp.

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