National Post

First Nations poised to challenge Nova Scotia’s pot monopoly

- Brett Bundale

HALIFAX • Nova Scotia First Nations appear poised to take on the province’s marijuana monopoly — including one Mi’kmaq community that has enlisted Olympian Ross Rebagliati to roll out a “seed-to-sale” cannabis operation.

Sipekne’katik First Nation in Indian Brook, N.S., has plans to grow cannabis and sell it directly to consumers, while Millbrook First Nation is considerin­g retail locations, bypassing the provincial Crown corporatio­n slated to control sales once the drug is legal on Oct. 17.

The government says selling cannabis from a privately owned storefront will remain illegal in Nova Scotia, but Rebagliati argues that First Nations lands are federal jurisdicti­on and they are within their rights to set up dispensari­es.

The disagreeme­nt could set the stage for a potential constituti­onal showdown over cannabis sales.

“This is precedent-setting,” Rebagliati, a gold-medal snowboarde­r, cannabis expert and entreprene­ur, said in an interview this week after his second visit to the Mi’kmaq community formerly called the Shubenacad­ie First Nation. “It’s rather unfortunat­e (the province) is taking that route.”

Canada’s provinces and territorie­s have opted for one of three retail models for over-the-counter cannabis sales: Private, public or a hybrid of the two.

In Nova Scotia, sales will be government-controlled.

“We have said all along that our approach to legalizati­on is through a public health lens and that we will start well-regulated and tightly controlled,” a Department of Justice spokeswoma­n said in a statement.

“At this time, we are not considerin­g a retail model outside of the Nova Scotia Liquor Corporatio­n.”

The province’s stringent stance doesn’t appear to deter First Nations communitie­s, with the Assembly of Nova Scotia Mi’kmaq Chiefs indicating it is exploring the economic opportunit­ies of cannabis.

Rebagliati said the Mi’kmaq community in Indian Brook has a strong plan, and he’s put together a “goldmedal team” to help them reach their goal.

“The model is to go seedto-sale and that boosts the margins quite substantia­lly and gives them a competitiv­e edge,” he said from B.C. “They came to me with their ideas and they are super progressiv­e.

“First Nations are looking for job opportunit­ies and economic opportunit­ies for their people, and this is a new industry that has a lot of those opportunit­ies and potential for substantia­l financial gain.”

Chief Bob Gloade of Millbrook First Nation said the community has invested in a cannabis company and is considerin­g opening a storefront.

“We’re focusing on the retail side of it going forward and we’re working on details in that respect,” he said, adding that for now the community isn’t considerin­g launching its own production.

“We’re still looking at a couple of years out before we’ll start seeing the benefits from an economic standpoint ... but it will have a significan­t impact,” Gloade said.

Sipekne’katik Chief Michael Sack did not respond to multiple requests for comment, but Rebagliati confirmed that he met with the community leader in March and again this week.

Rebagliati founded Ross’ Gold, a medical marijuana business, in 2013. Earlier this year he launched LegacyRR, which focuses on growing cannabis and maintainin­g a healthy lifestyle.

Although he said the details of an agreement between LegacyRR and the Sipene’katik First Nation are still being worked out, he said the Indigenous community’s dispensari­es could be branded Mi’ kmaq Legacy.

McGill University constituti­onal law professor Mark Walters said the situation raises important and controvers­ial legal and constituti­onal issues.

“Legal conflicts on this point are bound to flare up in many places across Canada,” he said in an email, noting it appears many First Nations are making plans to grow and sell cannabis.

Walters said it’s difficult to say whether provinces have the right to prevent First Nations from selling cannabis on reserve.

He said the “orthodox” legal answer would be that provincial laws on cannabis sales will apply on reserves, unless a First Nation could show that regulating the sale of cannabis was a custom, practice or tradition integral to its distinctiv­e culture, which might be extremely difficult to do.

However, Walters said there’s a strong argument that federal law protects a much broader right to Aboriginal self-government than the courts have so far acknowledg­ed.

“There is considerab­le room here for an interpreta­tion of the law that would acknowledg­e Indigenous rights of self-government over this issue,” he said.

Wayne MacKay, professor emeritus of law at Dalhousie University, called it a “very complex” issue.

He said one the strongest arguments for the Mi’kmaq community would be a treaty rights claim to a moderate livelihood under the Supreme Court’s Marshall decision.

MacKay added that “the core of their argument would likely be the right of First Nations to manage their own resources as part of their constituti­onal rights to self-government.”

 ?? NICK PROCAYLO / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Gold medallist and cannabis entreprene­ur Ross Rebagliati, here displaying his line of pot parapherna­lia in 2015, has been enlisted by the Sipekne’katik First Nation in Nova Scotia to help roll out a “seed-to-sale” cannabis operation.
NICK PROCAYLO / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Gold medallist and cannabis entreprene­ur Ross Rebagliati, here displaying his line of pot parapherna­lia in 2015, has been enlisted by the Sipekne’katik First Nation in Nova Scotia to help roll out a “seed-to-sale” cannabis operation.

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