Vancouver Sun

BUYING CANNABIS

B.C. picks Shopify to set up legal online sales

- DERRICK PENNER depenner@postmedia.com

British Columbians will be able to buy cannabis online and at least at one B.C. Cannabis Store on the Oct. 17 rollout of legalizati­on, the B.C. Liquor Distributi­on Branch said Friday.

Would-be private retailers are still waiting for the province to unveil its licensing regime.

B.C. LDB, the province’s exclusive wholesale distributo­r for legal, recreation­al cannabis, announced that it has picked Canadian online company Shopify Inc. to build its ecommerce portal, which was a priority for the branch.

“Having the portal operationa­l before the deadline is more important,” said B.C. LDB spokeswoma­n Viviana Zanocco. “That means we can provide a safe and reliable and quality product to anybody in the province.

“In terms of the stores, we’ve always said it was going to be a process. You can’t go from zero to 60 overnight.”

While the province hasn’t unveiled its retail-licensing regime, in unveiling guidelines in February, Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth said stores will have to have the support of municipali­ties.

Some municipali­ties are more comfortabl­e with legal cannabis than others, Zanocco said, and the LDB is working with those that are further along in their regulation process to locate stores, but “we haven’t signed any leases yet.”

“We want to make sure the communitie­s we move into are comfortabl­e with us,” Zanocco said.

It’s a good thing that municipali­ties have some autonomy in the process, according to Deepak Anand of Cannabis Compliance Inc., but the province needs to make its licensing regime clear soon.

“On the retail side, it’s a matter of coming up with a good policy that municipali­ties need to be able to follow,” said Anand, vice-president of business developmen­t and government relations at the firm.

“I think what the province has done is downloaded a lot of responsibi­lities on municipali­ties and cities saying, ‘You come up with a framework that works.’”

Some municipali­ties, such as Vancouver and Victoria, have considerab­le experience with medicinal dispensari­es and are better prepared, Anand said, but others are also waiting for some guidance from the province.

“We have all these dispensari­es,” he said.

“Either we license them and zone them, or let them know they ’re going to be shut down. There can’t be a free-for-all.”

Richmond is one of the municipali­ties that has declared an outright ban on storefront-retail cannabis sales, although ironically, that is where the B.C. LDB has found the warehouse it will lease as its wholesale distributi­on point.

With a shortage of industrial land in the Lower Mainland, Zanocco said the 75,000-square-foot facility on No. 6 Road was the only location that the branch could find to accommodat­e all of its requiremen­ts, in terms of security and having space to expand, and be ready for July 1.

The warehouse will include a customer call centre and online sales, and use modern warehouse management systems to track product informatio­n, such as expiry dates and lot numbers.

Zanocco said they talked with (the City of Richmond) way before they signed the lease and the city is comfortabl­e with what the B.C. LDB proposed.

Richmond Mayor Malcolm Brodie said he is OK with the warehouse, which is in an industrial zone and will only be supplied with packaged products, but the city has “never adopted the permissive attitude we’ve seen in neighbouri­ng cities.”

Brodie said council now has the chance to watch the experience of other municipali­ties, “but (prohibitio­n) is definitely our position at this point.”

However, anyone in the province will be able to buy cannabis online as of Oct. 17, according to Shopify executive Loren Padelford.

“We are totally confident on the time frame, being able to deliver this as fully functional by the golive date,” said Padelford, Shopify ’s vice-president and general manager.

B.C. LDB general manager Blain Lawson said in a news release that Shopify won the bid because of its “proven record of on-time execution.”

The task will be to develop two websites, one to serve online sales for B.C. LDB’s in-house B.C. Cannabis Stores brand, and a second to fulfil orders for the yet-to-be licensed private stores.

Padelford said Shopify has about four years of experience with the medical-marijuana market, handling sales for its big players, such as Canopy Growth, so is familiar with the challenges, such as age verificati­on, that come in dealing with a regulated product.

“It’s a combinatio­n of data points,” Padelford said.

Buyers will have to input a government ID number at the time of sale to complete a transactio­n, which will be verified at the time of delivery. B.C. will be the second province that Shopify will work with. Ontario, in May, selected it as its online provider.

Padelford said: “It isn’t a challenge from a technologi­cal standpoint. It’s just that this is a new product being sold to a consumer base for the first time in the world on this scale.”

On the retail side, it’s a matter of coming up with a good policy that municipali­ties need to be able to follow.

 ??  ??
 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/CHAD HIPOLITO ?? Some B.C. municipali­ties are waiting for more guidance on policies they believe will fall largely on their shoulders to enforce when pot becomes legal.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/CHAD HIPOLITO Some B.C. municipali­ties are waiting for more guidance on policies they believe will fall largely on their shoulders to enforce when pot becomes legal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada