Truro News

Economic highs

First Nations look to grow marijuana industry

- By Gemma Karstens-smith

Canada’s marijuana industry is expanding rapidly and some First Nations are looking to cash in on the emerging economic opportunit­ies.

Phil Fontaine, an Indigenous politician turned marijuana executive, has spent the last year travelling the country and talking to First Nations about jobs, wealth and training opportunit­ies the burgeoning marijuana business could bring.

“Everywhere we’ve been, it’s been the same reaction, interest, excitement. First Nations are speaking about possibilit­ies and potential. So it’s been very encouragin­g,” said the former national chief of the Assembly of First Nations.

Marijuana businesses represent “tremendous potential” for First Nations, partially because communitie­s are able to get in on the ground floor, instead of fighting to catch up years later as has traditiona­lly been the case, Fontaine said.

“This is a unique opportunit­y. This sector is different than any other the Indigenous community has experience­d. Everyone is starting off at the same point,” he said in a telephone interview.

Fontaine is the CEO of Indigenous Roots, a medical marijuana company operated by and for First Nations across Canada.

The company is a joint venture with Cronos Group, a medial-marijuana grower licensed by Health Canada. Once Indigenous Roots is operating, its profits will be split evenly between partner First Nations and Cronos.

Though recreation­al marijuana is set to become legal this summer, Indigenous Roots will focus on supplying prescripti­on pot to First Nations communitie­s, which Fontaine said have traditiona­lly had lower access to the drug.

“We want to make sure that this particular service is made avail- Former Assembly of First Nations chief Phil Fontaine attends the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission in Ottawa. Canada’s marijuana industry is expanding rapidly and some First Nations are looking to cash in on the emerging economic opportunit­ies.

able to our communitie­s in every part of the country,” he said.

Plans are in the works to build an Indigenous Roots growing facility next to an existing Cronos facility in Armstrong, B.C., with the aim of serving patients by the end of 2018, Cronos CEO Mike Gorenstein said in an interview.

Current Cronos workers will train First Nations employees to run the Indigenous Roots operation, he said.

“Long term and medium term, this is meant to be an Indigenous-operated company,” Gorenstein said. “Our commitment is to make sure that any knowledge that we have or we continue to gain, that we’re sharing and we’re always there to support.”

The new facility will create between 30 and 50 jobs, plus other opportunit­ies in marketing, sales and accounting, Gorenstein said. Future operations will likely be even bigger, he added.

A cannabis company in northern Ontario has also teamed up with local Indigenous communitie­s.

Forty-nine First Nations have invested in 48North Cannabis, representi­ng about 20 per cent of the company’s current shareholde­r base, said CEO Alison Gordon.

48North also has community benefit agreements with two Indigenous communitie­s near its operations in Kirkland Lake, Ont. The company provides preferenti­al hiring, and funding for drug and alcohol education, Gordon said.

The company is waiting final approval from Health Canada before sending medical marijuana to market, and is eyeing the recreation­al market, Gordon said.

First Nations will help direct the company’s growth, she added.

“It’s just part of our DNA. I mean, we want to work with our First Nations partners to figure out how to create products and brands that would be important to their communitie­s, to help educate their communitie­s.”

Other communitie­s in B.C. believe cannabis could be a boon and are asking the provincial government to help ensure they get a piece of the emerging market.

In recent submission­s to the government’s consultati­on on cannabis regulation­s, the Lake Cowichan and Ucluelet First Nations urged the province to implement a rule that requires a certain percentage of marijuana products be grown by Indigenous cultivator­s.

 ?? CP photo ??
CP photo

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