Windsor Star

Communitie­s can delay but not opt out of pot shops: Finance Ministry

-

TORONTO Communitie­s across Ontario cannot opt out of hosting a government-run pot shop if they are selected for a site, the provincial government said Friday after at least one town expressed resistance to having a cannabis retail location.

If a community is selected to host one of the marijuana shops, it could delay hosting the store but cannot completely opt out of having it, said Ontario’s Ministry of Finance.

“As we roll out the next phase of stores, we will continue to engage with municipali­ties on an ongoing basis, including with those municipali­ties who may not be ready for a store opening in July 2018,” said Jessica Martin, spokeswoma­n for Finance Minister Charles Sousa.

“Ultimately, our goal through a controlled model is to ensure a safe and sensible framework for cannabis legalizati­on.”

Last month, the LCBO announced the cities that will host the first 14 stores will be located in Barrie, Brampton, Hamilton, Kingston, Kitchener, London, Mississaug­a, Ottawa, Sault Ste. Marie, Sudbury, Thunder Bay, Toronto, Vaughan and Windsor.

Earlier this week, a committee of the City of Richmond Hill unanimousl­y endorsed a statement saying it was not willing to host one of the retail stores. City councillor­s are expected to debate the motion next week.

The community had been notified in late November that the Liquor Control Board of Ontario, which will run the shops through a subsidiary, was beginning early work to site a store in Richmond Hill. In a report from the city’s municipal staff, councillor­s were told they would likely only have a say over the zoning of a proposed location.

Martin said the government has consulted with municipali­ties about its retail model through the Associatio­n of Municipali­ties of Ontario.

“Municipali­ties were involved in establishi­ng the initial guidelines for siting stores, including achieving geographic distributi­on and combating illegal dispensari­es,” she said.

In October, Sousa wrote municipal leaders and said Ontario’s store rollout aims to achieve the right geographic distributi­on across the province and to reduce the number of illegal marijuana dispensari­es that have opened since the federal government announced it will legalize recreation­al marijuana next summer.

The public will also be notified about the proposed store locations and will be asked to provide feedback directly to the LCBO, he said. None of the retail stores will be located near schools, Sousa said.

The LCBO hopes to open its first batch of 40 stores by July 2018. The province plans to set up approximat­ely 150 stand-alone cannabis stores by 2020.

All consumers will also be able to access cannabis through an online retail website.

Associatio­n of Municipali­ties of Ontario executive director Pat Vanini said reaction to Ontario’s plan to retail cannabis has been met with anxiety by some municipal leaders who say the process has not provided them with enough informatio­n.

Some communitie­s don’t want to be part of the first wave of government-run cannabis stores, she said.

“We’re at such and early stage we still haven’t been able to nail down how municipal government­s costs that are going to host retail facilities will be recovered,” she said. “There is still, amazingly at this point in implementa­tion, a lot of unknowns. That’s what’s creating some consternat­ion.”

Ontario was the first province to announce a detailed plan to sell and distribute recreation­al marijuana and will set the legal age to purchase it at 19.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada