Tri-County Vanguard

Province announces nine NSLC sites for cannabis sales

Yarmouth NSLC only location in western Nova Scotia on list

- TINA COMEAU AND LAWRENCE POWELL TRICOUNTY VANGUARD

Yarmouth will be one of the locations where cannabis will be sold at the NSLC in July, but it’s only one of nine locations in the entire province where cannabis will be sold in NSLCs, says the province.

It’s also the only location west of Halifax.

There are no locations in Shelburne and Digby counties, and no locations on the province’s south shore or in the valley.

The Nova Scotia government had previously announced that NSLCs locations in the province are where cannabis would be sold from when it is legalized in July. However, on Jan. 30 the government surprised many with its announceme­nt that only nine locations in the province will sell cannabis.

The nine locations, announced by Attorney General and Minister of Justice Mark Furey are:

• Amherst – 126 South Albion St.

• Dartmouth – 650 Portland St.

• Halifax – 5540 Clyde St.

• Halifax – 3601 Joseph Howe Dr.

• Lower Sackville – 752 Sackville Dr.

• New Glasgow – 610 East River Rd.

• Sydney River – 95 Keltic Dr.

• Truro – 6 Court St.

• Yarmouth – 104A Starrs Rd. The NSLC will also reopen the former store on Clyde Street in Halifax. It will exclusivel­y sell cannabis.

For those not close to a location where cannabis will be sold, the government says online sales from the NSLC, with home delivery, will be offered. Nova Scotians will also be able to grow up to four plants per household.

On social media throughout the day of the announceme­nt there was much criticism over the gaps between locations and the long distances many in rural Nova Scotia would have to drive to make purchases at an NSLC location. There was also concern that those gaps will keep the black market alive and well.

Nova Scotia Justice Minister Mark Furey said the factors included in making the selections were based on NSLC space available to be converted, the concerns around the transition from an illicit drug to a recreation­al drug, and the as-yet untried business case for actual sales of legal pot. He pushed the fact that it will be available for purchase online.

“We recognize that not everybody has access to high speed Internet, but that online homedelive­ry option will still serve a purpose,” Furey said. “We also believe that there will be people who will grow their own product, so in this approach, we’re trying to address those circumstan­ces.”

CONCERNS OVER GAPS

“I personally was blown away to see the limited options people will have as far as retail outlets they can go to to purchase cannabis,” said Debbie Stultz-Giffin, who heads up Maritimers United for Medical Marijuana Society. “Absolutely shocked. If they think they’re going undermine the black market in this province by only offering nine retail outlets, most of them based in liquor corporatio­ns, they’re sadly, sadly mistaken.”

Stultz-Giffin, who is from West Dalhousie in Annapolis County, said the online purchase option may do something to allow rural Nova Scotians access to marijuana, but she’s not convinced.

“Sitting back and looking at the whole scenario, many of the people who consume cannabis on a recreation­al basis do last minute purchase on a Friday night,” she said. “It’s an economical­ly deprived province and most people live paycheque to paycheque, so how are they going to be able to purchase cannabis online in advance of perhaps a weekend event. It just doesn’t seem like a practical solution at all when most people would be looking at at least a two-day delivery time I would imagine.”

She said that while the planned roll-out will put many recreation­al users at a disadvanta­ge in most of the province, those who use cannabis for medical reasons will be just as impacted and their health will suffer.

“Anybody who has to drive those overwhelmi­ng distances to purchase cannabis will end up being disadvanta­ged by the whole process,” she said. “The last I heard there were only eight per cent of the doctors in this province authorizin­g patients to use cannabis. So patients that go to other doctors who refuse to sign their licenses will again be denied access if they have to make that long of a trip to purchase their medicine.”

A request for proposals was issued Jan. 30 for constructi­on services to make alteration­s to the locations listed above. The province says the federal government also recently completed consultati­on on additional regulation­s. These regulation­s, which may include packaging, labelling and tracking, will impact how retailers will sell cannabis. Additional announceme­nts about the NSLC’s cannabis retail model, including store configurat­ion, will be made as decisions are finalized.

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