Montreal Gazette

Ontario names first 14 cities to host legal marijuana shops

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO Ontario has named the first 14 cities where it will set up government-run marijuana stores by July 2018.

The Liquor Control Board of Ontario, which will run the shops through a subsidiary, said Friday the stores will be located in Brampton, Hamilton, Barrie, Kingston, Kitchener, London, Mississaug­a, Ottawa, Sault Ste. Marie, Sudbury, Thunder Bay, Toronto, Vaughan and Windsor.

The LCBO said its representa­tives, along with staff from Ontario’s Ministry of Finance, will meet with the municipali­ties in the coming weeks to determine the exact locations.

The Ontario government said it will be identifyin­g more locations for its first batch of 40 stores but notes that all consumers will be able to access cannabis through an online retail website.

The province plans to set up approximat­ely 150 stand-alone cannabis stores by 2020.

Last week, Finance Minister Charles 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 marijuana next summer.

“Our proposed approach is to build on the expertise and backoffice capabiliti­es of the LCBO to set up the Crown Corporatio­n,” Sousa said in the letter to municipali­ties. “Our priority is to reduce the illegal market by building on our strengths to create an efficient and secure system for people across the province.”

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.

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.

The federal government introduced legislatio­n in April with a goal of legalizing and regulating the use of recreation­al pot by July 1, but left it up to individual provinces to design their own distributi­on system and usage regulation­s.

Consumptio­n of legal weed will not be allowed in public spaces or workplaces and should be confined to private residences, the province has said.

The government introduced its marijuana legislatio­n earlier this week, which contains new penalties for people who are convicted of illegally selling or distributi­ng cannabis, including fines of up to $250,000 and/or jail of up to two years less a day.

Attorney General Yasir Naqvi said the government will clamp down on illegal distributi­on channels. “We are going to work very hard towards that,” he said.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R KATSAROV/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Ontario Finance Minister Charles Sousa, centre, told municipal leaders in a letter last week that the rollout of legal marijuana shops next summer aims to achieve the right geographic distributi­on across the province and to reduce the number of illegal...
CHRISTOPHE­R KATSAROV/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Ontario Finance Minister Charles Sousa, centre, told municipal leaders in a letter last week that the rollout of legal marijuana shops next summer aims to achieve the right geographic distributi­on across the province and to reduce the number of illegal...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada