The Denver Post

Happy customers light up as marijuana sales begin

World’s largest legal pot marketplac­e opens

- By Rob Gillies, Gene Johnson and Tracey Lindeman

MONTREAL» Jubilant customers stood in long lines for hours then lit up and celebrated on sidewalks Wednesday as Canada became the world’s largest legal marijuana marketplac­e.

In Toronto, people smoked joints as soon as they rolled out of bed in a big “wake and bake” celebratio­n. In Alberta, a government website that sells pot crashed when too many people tried to place orders.

And in Montreal, Graeme Campbell welcomed the day he could easily buy all the pot he wanted.

“It’s hard to find people to sell to me because I look like a cop,” the cleancut, 43yearold computer programmer said outside a newly opened pot store.

He and his friend, Alex Lacrosse, were smoking a joint when two police officers walked by. “I passed you a joint right in front of them and they didn’t even bat an eye,” Lacrosse told his friend.

Festivitie­s erupted throughout the nation as Canada became the largest country on the planet with legal marijuana sales. At least 111 pot shops were expected to open Wednesday across the nation of 37 million people, with many more to come, according to an Associated Press survey of the provinces. Uruguay was the first country to legalize marijuana.

Ian Power was first in line at a store in St. John’s, Newfoundla­nd, but he didn’t plan to smoke the one gram he bought after midnight.

“I am going to frame it and hang it on my wall,” the 46yearold Power said. “I’m going to save it forever.”

Tom Clarke, an illegal pot dealer for three decades, opened a pot store in Portugal Cove, Newfoundla­nd, and made his first sale to his dad. He was cheered by the crowd waiting in line.

“This is awesome. I’ve been waiting my whole life for this,” Clarke said. “I am so happy to be living in Canada right now instead of south of the border.”

The start of legal sales wasn’t the only good news for pot aficionado­s: Canada said it intends to pardon everyone with conviction­s for possessing up to 30 grams of marijuana, the newly legal threshold.

“I don’t need to be a criminal anymore, and that’s a great feeling,” Canadian singer Ashley MacIsaac said outside a government­run shop in Nova Scotia. “And my new dealer is the prime minister!”

Medical marijuana has been legal since 2001 in Canada, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has spent the past two years working toward legalizing recreation­al pot to better reflect society’s changing opinion about marijuana and bring black market operators into a regulated system.

Corey Stone and a friend got to one of the 12 stores that opened in Quebec at 3:45 a.m. to be among the first to buy pot. Hundreds later lined up.

“It’s a onceinalif­etime thing — you’re never ever going to be one of the first people able to buy legal recreation­al cannabis in Canada ever again,” said Stone, a 32yearold restaurant and bar manager.

The stores have a sterile look, like a modern clinic, with a security desk to check identifica­tion. The products are displayed in plastic or cardboard packages behind counters. Buyers can’t touch or smell the products before they buy. A small team of employees answer questions but don’t

make recommenda­tions.

“It’s a candy store, I like the experience,” said Vincent Desjardins, a 20yearolds­tudent who plans to apply for a job at the Montreal shop.

Canadians can also order marijuana products through websites run by provinces or private retailers and have it delivered to their home by mail.

At 12:07 a.m., the Alberta Liquor and Gaming Commission tweeted: “You like us! Our website is experienci­ng some heavy traffic. We are working hard to get it up and running.”

Alberta and Quebec have set the minimum age for marijuana purchase at 18, while other provinces have made it 19.

No stores will open in Ontario, which includes Toronto. The nation’s most populous province is working on its regulation­s and doesn’t expect stores to operate until next spring.

A patchwork of regulation­s has spread in Canada as each province takes its own approach within the framework establishe­d by the federal government. Some provinces have government­run stores, others allow private retailers, and some have both.

Canada’s national approach allows unfettered banking for the pot industry, interprovi­nce shipments of cannabis and billions of dollars in investment — a sharp contrast with prohibitio­ns in the neighborin­g United States, where nine states have legalized recreation­al sales of pot and more than 30 states have approved medical marijuana.

Bruce Linton, CEO of marijuana producer and retailer Canopy Growth, claims he made the first pot sale in Canada — less than a second after midnight in Newfoundla­nd.

“It was extremely emotional,” he said. “Several people who work for us have been working on this for their entire adult life and several of them were in tears.”

Linton is proud that Canada is now at the forefront of the burgeoning industry.

“The last time Canada was this far ahead in anything, Alexander Graham Bell made a phone call,” said Linton, whose company recently received an investment of $4 billion from Constellat­ion Brands, whose holdings include Corona beer and Robert Mondavi wines.

 ?? Christophe­r Katsarov, The Canadian Press ?? Krissy Calkins smokes a marijuana joint at a “Wake and Bake” legalized marijuana event in Toronto on Wednesday. Canada became the largest country with a legal national marijuana marketplac­e as sales began early Wednesday in Newfoundla­nd.
Christophe­r Katsarov, The Canadian Press Krissy Calkins smokes a marijuana joint at a “Wake and Bake” legalized marijuana event in Toronto on Wednesday. Canada became the largest country with a legal national marijuana marketplac­e as sales began early Wednesday in Newfoundla­nd.

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