The Telegram (St. John's)

No legal cannabis edibles on the market

NLC pot enforcemen­t building its presence

- ASHLEY FITZPATRIC­K

Edible cannabis products – anything from gummies to cannabis-infused honey – are not yet legal in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, but illicit products are always popping up. Some are being picked up by the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Liquor Corporatio­n (NLC) in cannabis-related enforcemen­t efforts, as well as in joint law enforcemen­t efforts.

Regulation­s for edibles come into effect this fall, with the legal products expected to begin rolling out about mid-december.

But even when those products are available, the cannabis gummies and “medicated krisps” seized and displayed in the drugs-on-the-table press conference in St. John’s on Thursday will still be illegal.

The only legal edibles will be products certified by federal and provincial authoritie­s, and sold through Cannabis NL or a licensed retailer.

Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Liquor Corporatio­n vice-president of regulatory services Sean Ryan drove home the fact legal cannabis edibles will, first of all, have a different look than much of what has been seized by NLC officers over the last few months.

“In terms of the style of packaging, you’ll see some of the packaging (internatio­nally and in the illicit market) is very, very ornate, very colourful, these types of things, whereas in Canada it would be very benign, strict regulation­s and packaging pursuant to federal regulation­s,” he said.

NLC enforcemen­t officers will continue to target illicit edible products, the same as with illegal marijuana.

Less than a year since the NLC was given an enforcemen­t role with cannabis and legal marijuana came on the scene, Ryan said enforcemen­t has reached full steam, with four search warrants since June and about $1.2-million in products seized between June and present.

Ryan mentioned four search warrants but “a lot more than just four” cannabis-related investigat­ions also involving the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Royal Newfoundla­nd Constabula­ry and Canada Post.

“We’re establishi­ng memorandum­s of understand­ing and informatio­n sharing agreements, but in the interim we’re working very diligently together to ensure that we can disrupt this (black market) business as much as we possibly can,” he said.

Government­s are profiting on the legal cannabis business through taxation, but regulators say the difference between legal and illegal product is about more than taxes, packaging or final price. Illegal products have no testing procedures, no quality assurance for safe use. And the money organized crime or illegal sellers don’t take in taxes and quality control can often be diverted to fund criminal enforcemen­t efforts, guns and protection, or go to buy-ins on other drugs.

Finance Minister Tom Osborne, who is also the minister responsibl­e for the NLC, applauded the Crown corporatio­n for the work completed in building up its enforcemen­t arm.

“I think the message today is that the partnershi­p between the NLC and other law enforcemen­t agencies and Canada Post is working,” he said, giving a nod to the dried cannabis, edibles, oil, seeds, cash and electronic­s collected in an NLC boardroom.

“For a brand new market that you know for generation­s has been operated illegally and in large part by organized crime, I think they’ve done a fantastic job in terms of the roll out. Again, we anticipate­d speed bumps but we had less speed bumps than we anticipate­d,” he said.

As for legal sales of cannabis in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador? Total sales are $29 million, as of the end of July.

 ??  ?? Edible products, including these cannabis potato chips, “medicated krisps,” were seized during recent enforcemen­t efforts in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador. Even after cannabis edibles become legal in Canada (regulation­s kick in Oct. 17, with product expected to roll out about mid-december following Health Canada and other approvals), the products will be subject to strict regulation­s on packaging and content. The product here — uncertifie­d, black market — would still be illegal.
Edible products, including these cannabis potato chips, “medicated krisps,” were seized during recent enforcemen­t efforts in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador. Even after cannabis edibles become legal in Canada (regulation­s kick in Oct. 17, with product expected to roll out about mid-december following Health Canada and other approvals), the products will be subject to strict regulation­s on packaging and content. The product here — uncertifie­d, black market — would still be illegal.

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