The Daily Courier

Beer districts are hopping but where’s the bud?

- By DAVID WYLIE

There are districts for beer, wine, and spirits… so why aren’t there any ‘Bud Districts’?

The largest city in the Okanagan Valley, Kelowna, draws tourists from all over the world with its vineyards and wineries.

However, the City of Kelowna says planning for any kind of cannabis corridor – such as Kelowna’s ale or wine trails – isn’t on their radar at all.

That’s a shame says cannabis lobbyist Nathan Mison, president of Diplomat Consulting.

“The Okanagan is probably positioned to be one of the leaders in bringing B.C. bud to the world and inviting the world to see micro-producers with micro-restaurant­s in front of them,” says Mison, president of Diplomat Consulting.

Yet, Kelowna is an example of the problem plaguing B.C., he argues, specifical­ly that municipal involvemen­t is overrepres­ented in cannabis. As one of the Fire & Flower founders, Mison says he has personally experience­d the difficulti­es of the city’s process around rezoning for a store.

“If it doesn’t move municipall­y, it doesn’t move,” he says.

“B.C. is probably going to move fastest provincial­ly and slowest municipall­y. That is not what people want to see.”

“Considerin­g 27 per cent of worldwide travellers want a cannabis experience when they travel, why can’t Canada build the only federally regulated environmen­t in the world? Come have a food and drink experience, a coffee shop experience. Kelowna would be really well suited to that. You guys have done so well in the Okanagan on the wine experience, why can’t you have cannabis cellar doors in the same way you do wine cellar doors where you have local food, local products, local chefs cooking local cannabis that can only be eaten at that restaurant at that production facility?” said Mison

Nearly five years into legalizati­on, B.C.’s Public Safety Minister and Solicitor General Mike Farnworth has been talking about revising provincial regulation­s for retail, farmgate, and public consumptio­n.

“But you haven’t seen municipali­ties start talking about the new way cannabis regulation­s should be for cannabis retail, cannabis production, and cannabis tourism and hospitalit­y, including these districts that you’re talking about,” says Mison.

Canada is on the precipice of losing the advantage of a big head start in cannabis tourism, he says.

Tourism Kelowna has been supportive of the cannabis industry.

The organizati­on’s president and CEO, Lisanne Ballantyne, has spoken two years in a row at the B.C. Cannabis Summit.

She says cannabis tourism is an emerging industry – but not a big one yet.

“Although currently not a significan­t lure for leisure travel, cannabis does provide excellent business travel, meetings and conference opportunit­ies when you consider it as part of our agricultur­e and manufactur­ing sectors,” Ballantyne told the oz.

“A growing and thriving cannabis industry attracts business travellers and business investment.”

The tangle of red zoning tape and mishmash of municipal bylaws could open up opportunit­ies for a variety of cannabis-based businesses to conglomera­te in Indigenous communitie­s and attract tourism as municipali­ties drag their feet.

Cory Brewer, who is Syilx, says wine districts and trails are great models to follow.

“Yes, there are talks of this type of initiative in the near future,” he told The Daily Courier.

Owner of Timixw Wellness, Brewer was the first person to receive a cannabis business licence from the Okanagan Indian Band.

He also sees hemp farms as part of a sustainabl­e future.

“Some of the plans also include the potentials of hemp as a tool for carbon sequestrat­ion and carbon storage as a big factor going forward,” he says. “There seems to be great progressiv­e movement in the industry.”

From Mison’s perspectiv­e, cannabis advocates have a responsibi­lity to speak to municipal staff and council about opportunit­ies in cannabis for economic diversific­ation.

“Good informatio­n creates good outcomes, especially in the face of ignorance,” he says.

He also acknowledg­ed municipali­ties have a lot of responsibi­lity in cannabis but the least amount of money.

It’s low on the municipali­ties’ long list of priorities.

The consultant has been focusing his own efforts on the City of Edmonton, which he predicts will be the first municipali­ty in Canada to license a legal consumptio­n space. He says he expects that to happen within a year.

Why Edmonton? Mison says Edmonton is doing a comprehens­ive bylaw renewal for the first time since 1959, focus on licensing and zoning. That opened up an opportunit­y to advocate for cannabis-specific licences, he says.

 ?? JOHN McDONALD/The Daily Courier ?? The City of Kelowna is actively promoting the so-called Brewery District in the North End, but has made no effort to promote something similar for the cannabis sector.
JOHN McDONALD/The Daily Courier The City of Kelowna is actively promoting the so-called Brewery District in the North End, but has made no effort to promote something similar for the cannabis sector.

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