Toronto Star

Pot shops unevenly distribute­d

No legal cannabis stores planned for Hamilton, but London gets three

- GREG MERCER

KITCHENER— Ontario’s lottery system to dole out the first wave of cannabis shop licences is producing some unusual results across the province. Canada’s most populated province will allow privately owned retail marijuana sales starting April 1, after the Ford government abandoned a plan for government-run stores last summer.

The first 25 pot shops will have exclusive access to the bricks and mortar market until the end of the year, as part of a lottery system that was intended to distribute retail licences fairly across Ontario.

But the reality has been anything but fair as would-be operators are concentrat­ing in a handful of cities.

So far, 18 of the 25 lottery winners have submitted applicatio­ns to the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario to open a cannabis store. It’s expected very few of them will be ready in time for the April deadline.

Three of those applicatio­ns are for proposed stores in London, a city with a population of about 385,000 people.

Based on applicatio­ns submitted to this point, that’s the same number of legal cannabis shops as Toronto, a city with more than seven times that population.

Kingston, a community with roughly 125,000 residents, has two proposed cannabis shops — just one less than Ottawa.

There are none planned yet for municipali­ties such as Waterloo Region, Hamilton, Guelph, Sarnia or Windsor, or anywhere else in the vast ‘West Region’ that stretches all the way from Manitoulin Island to Lake Erie.

Others cities that also approved cannabis shops are Barrie, Thunder Bay, Sault Ste. Marie, Belleville and Peterborou­gh, have also been shut out.

More than 17,000 applicants tried to get a cannabis store licence through a lottery system that divided the province into five regions — north, west, east GTA and Toronto — in an attempt to distribute stores more evenly.

The other proposed stores in the West Region would be in St. Catharines and Niagara Falls. The remaining cannabis stores in other parts of Ontario are planned for Brampton, Oshawa, Burlington, Ajax and Sudbury.

No other licences will be permitted until after December 2019 because of distributi­on problems and supply shortages that have plagued the government’s system.

For some cannabis advocates, the uneven distributi­on of stores is proof of a retail system that was not well-designed.

“That’s a very good indicator of how badly this rollout appears to be going. And that’s squarely on the shoulders of the province,” said Peter Thurley, a Kitchener-based board member with Canadians for Fair Access to Medical Marijuana.

“I think this shows the absolute folly of the current government’s approach. It’s clearly not working … There’s a lot of things with this system that just aren’t adding up.”

The proposed stores in London would put three cannabis retailers within a 10-minute drive of each other.

Cannabis buyers in most other communitie­s in southweste­rn Ontario, meanwhile, would be left shopping for marijuana online, through the govern- ment-run Ontario Cannabis Store.

The disorganiz­ed rollout of retail stores has only given more opportunit­y for the black market to thrive, Thurley said.

“The vast majority of demand is still being met by the illegal market. With the uneven distributi­on of stores, that is 100 per cent going to continue,” he said.

“There’s no reason why the province of Ontario shouldn’t have been ready for this rollout. Four months after legalizati­on, and there’s still not a legal store in the most populous province in the country?”

Rules that prevent stores from doing home delivery, or consumers from ordering directly from licensed growers, also creates a vacuum that the black market is eager to fill, Thurley said. The Alcohol and Gaming Commission, meanwhile, stresses that it’s not responsibl­e for choosing where lottery winners get to open. That’s not how the system was designed.

“It is the applicant that chooses the location within an eligible community, not the AGCO,” said commission spokespers­on Raymond Kahnert.

Cannabis industry insiders, meanwhile, say would-be shop owners are struggling with a regulatory system that’s proving to be tremendous­ly complicate­d. They’re prohibited from changing the name of the person on an applicatio­n or the corporate structure of the company operating the store.

They’re also subject to a background check, scrutiny of tax records and financial statements. Each of the 25 lottery winners have to submit a $50,000 letter of credit — and could be fined $25,000 if they fail to get their stores up and running by the end of April.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Ontario’s lottery system has produced some unusual results, with London getting three stores while larger cities get none.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Ontario’s lottery system has produced some unusual results, with London getting three stores while larger cities get none.

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