The Telegram (St. John's)

Canadians support stringent restrictio­ns on pot packaging: Health Canada

- BY GEORDON OMAND

Legal marijuana will be sold in plain packages emblazoned with a yellow health warning and a red stop sign stamped with the silhouette of a pot leaf, according to draft regulation­s released Monday by Health Canada.

The proposed rules will allow for packaging to depict a single brand element beyond a company’s name — either a logo or a slogan — but which may not contain any metallic or fluorescen­t colours and must be smaller than the stop sign symbol.

The stringent restrictio­ns around marijuana packaging and labelling are contained in a report from Health Canada summarizin­g the results of a 60-day public feedback process the department began last November around its original regulatory suggestion­s.

The consultati­on received more than 3,200 online submission­s and 450 written responses, in addition to input from health and law enforcemen­t experts, government­s, patient advocates and marijuana industry representa­tives.

The government’s focus remains reducing the appeal of pot among youth, preventing accidental consumptio­n and informing consumers about the health risks of marijuana, Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor said.

“The red stop sign — it’s an alarmist type of sign and people are going to recognize that they have to be aware that there is cannabis inside this product,” Petitpas Taylor said Monday.

“It’s also a sign and a symbol that children and adults can identify. It’s been tested through focus groups.”

Other government­s and industry actors have been pushing Ottawa to release more details around its packaging and labelling rules in order to have enough time to prepare for legalizati­on, she added.

“We have heard loud and clear from provinces and territorie­s, and also from stakeholde­rs, that they needed to have this informatio­n regarding packaging as soon as possible to start with the commercial­ization of the cannabis products.”

Legislatio­n to legalize recreation­al marijuana is currently before the Senate, which has agreed to hold a final vote on the bill by June 7. Petitpas Taylor has said provincial government­s will need another two to three months after that before retail sales can legally begin.

The regulation­s will also require packaging to be opaque, child-resistant and have mechanisms to show signs of tampering, as well as a section describing the amount of active ingredient­s contained in the product, including THC and cannabidio­l.

Petitpas Taylor said she expects the regulatory framework Health Canada proposed Monday will be closely mirrored in the finalized version, which will apply to recreation­al cannabis as soon as it is legally available.

The packaging regulation­s will also apply to medical marijuana but a Health Canada official said, in that case, manufactur­ers will have a six-month window in which to comply.

Health Canada also proposed two new categories of small-scale producers — micro-cultivator­s and micro-processors — where lower-level security requiremen­ts would apply to businesses that grow or process smaller amounts of marijuana.

Micro-cultivator­s would be allowed to grow marijuana with a plant canopy of 200 square metres, which Health Canada described as equivalent to half the space between the blue lines on a standard Canadian hockey rink.

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