Toronto Star

Ontario not expecting much cash from weed

- ROBERT BENZIE QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU CHIEF

The cash-strapped Ontario government is not banking on a financial windfall from the looming legalizati­on of recreation­al marijuana, says Finance Minister Charles Sousa.

With officials at Queen’s Park preparing for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s federal legislatio­n next year, Sousa emphasized that no cannabis tax bonanza is anticipate­d.

“I have not taken into considerat­ion any of the possible receipts into our budget plans,” the finance minister, who hopes to eliminate a $4.3billion deficit next year, said Tuesday.

Asked if marijuana will be a cash cow for the treasury, Sousa was firm: “Not at all. That’s not something that I have been speculatin­g on. Even when it comes to the revenue, it’s not the overriding factor because I’m sure there’s going to be a lot of costs involved in terms of making sure that we administer it properly.”

The Ontario government expects to take in $1.2 billion in tobacco taxes this year, plus $611 million in beer and wine taxes, and an additional $2 billion from the LCBO. But provincial officials have not yet calculated how much revenue legalized recreation­al marijuana would bring into their coffers. Some economists have estimated it could be similar to the amount gleaned through tobacco taxes, while others predict it will be far lower.

Health Minister Eric Hoskins is concerned about the toll of increased marijuana smoking.

“From a health perspectiv­e as we go forward, our contributi­ons to the discussion­s focus on harm reduction and the potential negative impact of marijuana. I’m not talking about medicinal marijuana here, which is a legal substance,” he said.

Premier Kathleen Wynne has said she would like the government­owned Liquor Control Board of Ontario to oversee the sale of recreation­al weed. But government officials say that does not mean the LCBO’s 650 stores across Ontario would be stocking Super Lemon Haze cannabis next to bottles of Limoncello liqueur. They note that the Crown agency is also a wholesaler whose mission includes controllin­g access to booze by underage Ontarians.

“It’s challengin­g because we’re in that interestin­g time between the (federal) government indicating its intent and actually creating a legislativ­e framework,” Hoskins said of storefront shops.

“So there are proponents of making marijuana more readily available that are . . . anticipati­ng these certain changes, yet we are in a legislativ­e environmen­t that still prohibits it,” he said.

“We’ve seen at the municipal level the challenges — not just in Toronto or Vancouver — that the municipali­ties have faced in this interestin­g time.”

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