Vancouver Sun

Ontario to sell pot in private stores

- Geoff Zochodne Financial Post gzochodne@nationalpo­st.com Twitter.com/GeoffZocho­dne

TORONTO• Ontario announced Monday that it is abandoning the previous Liberal plan for a government-run monopoly on legalized marijuana sales, earning praise from pot producers that could gain a new route to cannabis consumers in Canada’s largest province.

The newly elected Conservati­ve government’s proposal for recreation­al cannabis — with some critical details still to come, and just weeks away from federal legalizati­on — aims for online sales by the province at first, but eventually to allow for the private sector to open bricks-and-mortar pot shops.

“The Government of Ontario will not be in the business of running physical cannabis stores,” Finance Minister Vic Fedeli said. “Instead, we will work with privatesec­tor businesses to build a safe, reliable retail system that will divert sales away from the illegal market.”

Monday’s announceme­nt follows the election of Premier Doug Ford and the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves and reverses the plan of the previous Liberal government, which wanted to give the Liquor Control Board of Ontario a monopoly on the sale of recreation­al cannabis.

Under the new approach, Canada’s most populous province will still start selling cannabis online on the legalizati­on date of Oct. 17, using a website run by the provincial­ly owned Ontario Cannabis Store.

Fedeli said private retailers will have to follow a series of rules including prohibitin­g the sale of marijuana to anyone under the age of 19. Anyone caught violating the rules will face “severely escalating fines,” he said.

The province says this online retail channel will have a verificati­on system to ensure safe delivery, and to make sure Ontario is ready to retail the product in time for legalizati­on.

But Ontario will also have a “tightly regulated private retail model” for marijuana that is scheduled to be in place by April 1, according to a release, months after the drug is legalized by Ottawa.

The Ontario Cannabis Store will act as wholesaler and provide cannabis to the private-sector stores. No specific number of allowable private-sector stores was given on Monday.

Before launching the new private-sector model, the provincial government says it will consult with Indigenous communitie­s, law enforcemen­t and businesses, among others. More specifics about the province’s retail system will be ironed out through that process.

However, the Ford plan presents the possibilit­y of another avenue to consumers for cannabis companies, which were quick to applaud the decision.

In altering its intended retail model, Ontario will join Western provinces, including Alberta and Manitoba, that aim to have a privatesec­tor component to their legalized pot sales.

 ?? LARS HAGBERG/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Ontario’s new Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government revealed Monday that it will allow marijuana to be sold in private-sector retail outlets, and not only in government stores as was previously planned.
LARS HAGBERG/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Ontario’s new Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government revealed Monday that it will allow marijuana to be sold in private-sector retail outlets, and not only in government stores as was previously planned.

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