The Daily Courier

Hope that new cannabis stores will eat into black market pot

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WINNIPEG — The Manitoba government says nearly 100 organizati­ons have pre-qualified for the expansion of retail cannabis sales.

While it’s not known how many will be approved, the government is opening the door to new stores that it hopes will eat into the black market.

“Our goal remains for 90 per cent of the population to have access to retail (cannabis) within a 30minute drive, within two years of legalizati­on,” Blaine Pedersen, minister of growth, enterprise and trade, said in a written statement Wednesday.

“The ultimate goal is to move to an open market through a streamline­d applicatio­n process in order to ensure Manitobans can access safe, regulated cannabis supplies.”

The province originally chose four companies to sell cannabis when recreation­al pot sales became legal last October. The companies have opened 19 stores, mostly in Winnipeg and Brandon.

Last summer, the province asked other potential retailers to submit bids to be part of a second wave of store openings. Roughly 100 passed the pre-qualificat­ion test, which included showing retail experience and access to at least $300,000 in cash holdings.

The province plans to discuss potential new locations with municipali­ties. Any new outlets will have to get licences from the provincial regulator, which has specific requiremen­ts for storage, security and worker training.

More than 20 of the new applicants are members of the Manitoba Hotel Associatio­n.

Rural hotels often have beer vendors, which are a natural fit for cannabis sales, associatio­n president Scott Jocelyn said.

“We’re looking for additional opportunit­ies for operators, especially in those smaller communitie­s, to continue to be relevant, to continue to collect the taxes that they do, to employ the people that they do, to be the centre of those communitie­s,” Jocelyn said.

The province has not yet indicated when the next round of store openings will be approved. One hurdle is an ongoing wholesale shortage of cannabis that has affected existing stores.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? A man checks out a sample at a cannabis store in Winnipeg, Man.
The Canadian Press A man checks out a sample at a cannabis store in Winnipeg, Man.

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