Windsor Star

Medicine distributo­rs say they offer ‘proven solution’ to moving legal marijuana

- KRISTY KIRKUP

The federal government’s plans for legalizing recreation­al marijuana has many would-be players looking to carve out a role for themselves in the emerging market, including pharmaceut­ical distributo­rs who already ship drugs across the country.

The Canadian Associatio­n for Pharmacy Distributi­on Management — a supplier of medicine for pharmacies and hospitals — says it has a ready-made system for marijuana distributi­on that they say is far superior to mail-order pot.

Pharmaceut­ical distributo­rs offer a more appropriat­e vehicle for the recreation­al marijuana market, CEO David Johnston, noting they already have the infrastruc­ture in place to handle potential recalls, be it in downtown Toronto or remote northern Ontario.

“Pharmaceut­ical products (are) being shipped across this country and being delivered by the pharmaceut­ical distributo­rs, so we feel like we are a natural partner in the movement of marijuana, both medical and recreation­al, to whatever its final access point is,” Johnston said.

The federal government plans to have an establishe­d regime for legalized marijuana by July 2018, but will require provincial and territoria­l government­s to play a critical role on issues including licensing, distributi­on and retail sales.

More discussion­s can unfold with federal and provincial officials now that the Liberal government fired up the process last week when it tabled its marijuana legislatio­n, Johnston added.

“There are ... difficult and complicate­d questions that need to be answered around the legalizati­on of marijuana both medically and recreation­ally,” he said. “What we are suggesting is: here is a very complex section where you already have a ... proven solution.”

The government will ensure Canadians who need cannabis for medical purposes can do so through the existing regime, Health Minister Jane Philpott said this week, noting a federally appointed task force recommende­d a separate system alongside the recreation­al one.

In a 2016 decision, the Federal Court of Canada declared a previous medical marijuana system unconstitu­tional on the basis it did not provide patients with reasonable access to cannabis. The government introduced new regulation­s in August, so patients could access marijuana through licensed producers, produce their own, or designate someone to do so.

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