Vancouver Sun

If marijuana is legalized, sell it in liquor stores, B.C. groups say

Pot should be sold in ‘most socially responsibl­e way possible’

- LAURA KANE

British Columbians may eventually be able to buy recreation­al marijuana along with their beer in local liquor stores, if two groups have their way.

The B.C. Government and Service Employees’ Union and the B.C. Private Liquor Store Associatio­n have joined forces to call for legalized pot to be sold through the alcohol retail system.

The partnershi­p, called the Responsibl­e Marijuana Retail Alliance of B.C., advocates pot be available in liquor stores by Christmas 2016.

The union, which represents workers in nearly 200 public liquor stores, has not taken a position on whether it supports Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s plan to legalize marijuana, BCGEU president Stephanie Smith said.

“But we do believe that when this happens, it ought to be sold in the most socially responsibl­e way possible, in an age-controlled environmen­t with the strongest track record of checking identifica­tion,” she told a news conference Wednesday.

Smith called legalizati­on an “incredible opportunit­y” for B.C. because it already has an excellent system for distributi­ng and selling alcohol.

“Creating a new parallel system for the sale of non-medical marijuana will be incredibly costly, time-consuming and would divert money from social programs, education and addiction treatment into an additional bureaucrac­y,” she said.

Damian Kettlewell of the private liquor associatio­n — made up of more than 200 private liquor stores in the province — said they envision a system that is similar to beer and wine industries.

Producers of all sizes would sell their product to a central wholesaler at the liquor distributi­on branch, which would then distribute it to stores.

Kettlewell stressed that the groups want to sell only recreation­al pot, not medical marijuana, so they don’t expect their proposal to impact existing medical dispensari­es.

He also said the federal government should follow in the footsteps of American states that have allowed residents to grow small amounts of marijuana at home for personal use — similar to home brewing.

“The tax revenue from marijuana could fund a host of programs, from addiction recovery, prevention programs aimed at youth, education about the dangers of impaired driving, to more general programs like health and education,” he said.

The details of tax rates and program spending are for the federal and provincial government­s to decide, he added.

It’s not clear yet which level of government would give the go-ahead to sell marijuana in liquor stores. Smith said she believes legalized marijuana would fall under provincial jurisdicti­on, similar to alcohol. Municipali­ties also exert control over land use and zoning, and Kettlewell said the unions support the right of communitie­s to decide against allowing pot to be sold locally.

The provincial Justice Ministry said in a statement that it’s too early to speculate on the specifics of any future legislatio­n or its implementa­tion.

“Marijuana control is a federal responsibi­lity and B.C. will continue to monitor and would participat­e in any consultati­on the government of Canada may conduct around proposed changes,” the statement said.

 ?? BILL KEAY/VANCOUVER SUN FILES ?? The B.C. Government and Service Employees’ Union and the B.C. Private Liquor Store Associatio­n are calling for recreation­al pot to be sold in liquor stores by the end of next year.
BILL KEAY/VANCOUVER SUN FILES The B.C. Government and Service Employees’ Union and the B.C. Private Liquor Store Associatio­n are calling for recreation­al pot to be sold in liquor stores by the end of next year.

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