Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A marijuana low in Canada

- By Rob Gillies and Tracey Lindeman

TORONTO — The name of the store is High North, but it might as well be named High and Dry because for all but about four hours of the first two weeks since marijuana was legalized in Canada, there was no pot to sell.

Trevor Tobin, one of the owners of the Labrador City shop in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, said they went 10 straight days without supply.

“The producers keep saying there will be some bumps in the road, but right now it’s not a bump in the road. It’s a big pot hole,” he said.

His mother, Brenda Tobin, is a part-owner and said that after she tells customers there’s nothing to buy, “a lot of them are saying, ‘Oh well, I guess it’s backto the black market.’”

Legalizati­on arrived Oct. 17, and Canada became the world’s largest national marketplac­e for so-called recreation­al marijuana. But for now, it’s a superlativ­e in name only.

The first weeks have felt more like a soft opening with few retail outlets operating and rampant supply shortages. It’s not because Canada can’t produce enough cannabis products — licensing those producers has been slow, and the federal government is taking steps to speed up the process.

The provinces are handling the sales and most of the regulation­s. Reports from around the country are similarly discouragi­ng whenit comes to supply.

Quebec closed its government-run shops for three days this week because of a lack of pot and will continue to keep them shut Mondays through Wednesdays until availabili­ty is stabilized. Manitoba Liquor & Lotteries said it expects product shortages in both brick-andmortar and online stores could last six months.

Ontario, Canada’s most populous province, won’t have any stores open until April at the earliest as the new conservati­ve government writes regulation­s. Meantime, police have shut down at least 11 illegal dispensari­es in the province.

Ontario residents who want to make legal purchases are flooding the online government store. At least150,000 orders arrived in the first week, more than all other provinces combined, andthe store can’t keep up.

Contributi­ng to the delivery problem is a strike by workers at Canada Post, the nation’s postal service that handles online marijuana orders that are legal countrywid­e.

British Columbia, the third-largest province by population and a place that historical­ly supplied much of the country’s illegal weed, still has just one retail store.

Across Canada, people are returning to the black market.And some never left.

Corey Stone, a 32-year-old bar-restaurant manager in Montreal, and his friend were first in line at Quebec’s government-run cannabis store on Oct. 17, but he hasn’t been back because of the supply problems and has been getting his pot illegally.

In the capital of Ottawa, Ontario Capital Buds is one of the last holdouts after most of the illegal dispensari­es in town closed Oct. 16 so they could file for legal operating licenses. Business is booming— at 11 a.m. on a recent chilly, gray day, the waitingroo­m was packed.

Blake Murchison, 62, was among the customers. He didn’t try visiting the government’ s online store.

“Why? There’s a postal strike!” he laughed. “I’m not patient. It’s a matter of convenienc­e, really. Or inconvenie­nce .”

Devyn Stackhouse, a 30year-old student at Ottawa’s Algonquin College, did go to the government website Oct. 17 and placed two orders for five pre-rolled joints and a gram each of four cannabis strains. After waiting more than a week to get a delivery, Mr. Stack house went to an illegal dispensary.

“If [the government] were serious about access, serious about smothering the black market, then more resources would have been allocated to the OCS,” Mr. Stackhouse said, referring to the Ontario Cannabis Store website.

In Newfoundla­nd, 25year-old technician Elwood White has been to three legal shops and found little selection. He said the marijuana is more expensive but better quality.

Private and government retailers are dependent on licensed producers to send them products. But so far, of 132 marijuana producers approved by Health Canada, only78 have sales licenses.

FSD Pharma Inc., an Ontario-based producer, received a cultivatio­n license a year ago but still is waiting for a sales license.

“There is a lot of red tape,” said Dr. Raza Bokhari, co-chairman and interim chief executive of FSD Pharma. “Some of the obstacles are unnecessar­y. It is quite burden some.”

Many that did get sales licenses are smaller operations, said Cam Battley, a top executive at Aurora Cannabis Inc., one of Canada’s large-scale producers.

Health Canada has hired 300 additional staff to evaluate applicatio­ns for producers. Thierry Belair, a spokesman for Canada’ s health minister, said the government has streamline­d the licensing process and production is increasing.

“The implementa­tion of thenew legal regime that will better protect Canadians is not an event, it’s a process,” Mr. Belair said in an email. “The demand for some strains might be more important than for others but ... we are confident the industry is well-positioned to supply product as consumers transition to the legal market.”

The rollout problems have been felt in Canada’s financial markets. Cannabis company stocks that soared as legalizati­on arrived have been hammered since.

Aurora’s stock price lost about half its value since peaking at about $11.68, but Mr. Battley remains optimistic.

He acknowledg­ed some companies with sales licenses stumbled getting their products to the provinces amid demand that topped expectatio­ns. But Mr. Battley said customers who have gotten what they wanted are satisfied.

“A lot of people have been purchasing nondescrip­t cannabis in a baggy, and who knows how that was cultivated.” he said. “Once they get ahold of profession­ally cultivated cannabis and value-added products like the pre-rolls and capsules, they are pretty darned pleased.”

 ?? Chris Young/Associated Press ?? A man smokes multiple joints in a Toronto park as people mark the first day of legalizati­on of cannabis across Canada on Oct. 17.
Chris Young/Associated Press A man smokes multiple joints in a Toronto park as people mark the first day of legalizati­on of cannabis across Canada on Oct. 17.

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