Crash course in responsible cannabis sales
Ontario launches retail certification
It will take four hours of online training before employees can step behind the counter of a pot shop in this province.
That’s the average length of time a mandatory course known as CannSell will take prospective workers in Ontario’s forthcoming cannabis stores to complete, its builders say.
Created by the cannabis resource company Lift & Co. and MADD Canada, the program was announced this month by the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario as the sole certification program for all store employees.
“By law, everyone that touches canna- bis (in) retail essentially has to have this course,” said Lift & Co. head Matei Olaru.
“CannSell is meant to educate cannabis retail employees on the responsible sale of cannabis and their legal and regulatory obligations,” Olaru said.
The $49.99 (plus tax) course will be offered starting Feb. 25 and will have to graduate its first class in time for the scheduled April 1 opening of Ontario’s 25 initial brick-and-mortar shops.
Central to the self-guided program, said MADD Canada CEO Andrew Murie, is its focus on responsible sales.
“The drug presence in (road) fatalities is three times what it is for alcohol,” Murie said. “We’ve done an amazing job on alcohol so we need to applaud ourselves for that, but we still haven’t had the same rigour around cannabis.”
Murie said safety issues covered in the course will largely mirror those found in the Smart Serve Ontario training program, required of LCBO workers.
Most important, he said, are the program’s focus on the legal liability that stores could face, federal and provincial regulations surrounding pot, and the ability to recognize both cannabis and
alcohol impairment.
“If you train people to know their jobs so they don’t serve minors, they don’t serve intoxicated people, that lowers the incidence of potential impaired driving,” Murie said.
But he said ongoing alcohol and gaming commission inspections must ensure that the rules taught in the online program are being enforced at shop doors and counters.
“If we can tighten up on that (responsible service) then that goes a long way to reducing the harms.”
The course will also delve into the risks, harms and responsible use of cannabis and provide an overview of the plant and its history. The latter aspect, Olaru said, will give store employees the grounding they need to build an expertise in cannabis products that consumers will demand.
Some 70 per cent of consum- ers rank a strong product knowledge among store staff as the top feature of a cannabis outlet, a 2018 industry report by Deloitte Canada found. Olaru said Lift could take the lead on further product education among store employees.
“CannSell is very much a foundation for you to even understand how to talk about products.”
The course will be taken individually online and students must score 80 per cent to pass. All retail managers and store owners must also be CannSellcertified under provincial rules. The program’s website, cannsell.ca, has an information package on the course.
A similar program is being offered by MADD and Lift & Co. in Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and by many private stores across Canada.
Murie said CannSell programs are modular and that they can keep up with a changing industry — one that will see edibles enter the market next October, for example.
“The training needs to keep up with the marketplace,” he said. “So we designed it on that flexibility so every teaching element is a single component in the training, so it can be removed, updated and slotted back in — components come in, come out.”
Murie said he does not know if employees will be on the hook for the course costs or if store owners will cover them.