Windsor Star

Province to share pot taxes for policing

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The Government of Ontario will give municipali­ties $40 million from its share of federal marijuana taxes to help cover law enforcemen­t and safety costs associated with pot legalizati­on, the province announced Friday.

The money — which will be provided to municipali­ties upfront, beginning before legalizati­on takes effect later this year — will come from the first two years of federal excise duties on producers of recreation­al pot. “This funding will ensure that Ontario’s municipali­ties have dedicated resources for cannabis enforcemen­t,” said Marie-France Lalonde, minister of community safety and correction­al services. “Ontario will continue working with law enforcemen­t agencies to protect our communitie­s from illegal cannabis activity, and to keep impaired drivers off the road.” The money will be provided to municipali­ties based on the number of households they have, but will be adjusted so every municipali­ty gets a minimum of $10,000. If Ontario receives more than $100 million from federal marijuana tax over the course of two years, it will give half the surplus to municipali­ties. The province will also earn money through the sale of recreation­al marijuana at provincial­ly-licensed stores and online. The government revealed Friday that its pot-selling agency will be known as the Ontario Cannabis Store. “The name is designed to convey a safe, simple and approachab­le environmen­t for consumers, and agency employees, in a clear and easily understood manner,” the government said. Ontario is also creating a Cannabis Intelligen­ce Coordinati­on Centre to help shut down illegal storefront pot dispensari­es, paying for training to help police across the province recognize and stop drugimpair­ed drivers, and assembling a legal team to support the prosecutio­n of drug-impaired drivers. “We want to ensure Ontarians are protected from the dangers of drug-impaired driving and the sale of illegal, unregulate­d and potentiall­y unsafe cannabis,” said Ontario Attorney General Yasir Naqvi. “That is why it is so important that our municipal and enforcemen­t partners have the tools they need to take down illegal cannabis stores, better detect impaired drivers and prosecute offenders.”

The Associatio­n of Municipali­ties of Ontario said it was pleased to see Ontario help local government­s with needs arising from the new marijuana laws. The federal government agreed in December to give 75 per cent of its marijuana excise tax revenue to the provinces and territorie­s for two years. One third of the provincial and territoria­l government­s’ shares are expected to be given to municipali­ties.

The federal government’s share of the duties is capped at $100 million, with any additional revenue going to provinces and territorie­s. Every province and territory has signed on to the plan except Manitoba, which is holding out for a larger cut of excise revenue.

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