Vancouver Sun

Cannabis job fair part of an effort to hire thousands

Experts predict legalizati­on could lead to an industry worth billions a year

- NICK EAGLAND neagland@postmedia.com

On Thursday morning, Marco Cacchione put on a black button-up shirt, combed his hair, and walked down Robson Street to a job fair, hoping to snag a gig in an industry that is quickly emerging from the undergroun­d.

After a decade as a line cook, currently at one of Vancouver’s casual fine-dining chains, the 28-year-old said he is ready to make the leap into cannabis, which is expected to be legalized next July. The industry will require thousands of workers to meet the likely demand.

Contact dermatitis causes irritation on Cacchione’s hands and makes it painful to work long shifts on the line, so when he heard from a friend about the job fair — presented by the National Institute for Cannabis Health and Education — he wanted to see what it had to offer.

“I’m eager to learn about the industry,” Cacchione said. “I want to get involved in the industry. I have a passion for the industry and I’m slowly being forced out of my current industry.”

Deloitte has predicted that cannabis could someday be worth $22.6 billion a year in Canada. Cacchione believes much of this will be spent in restaurant­s, and so he plans to adapt his culinary skills and knowledge to cannabis. (Restaurant­s in U.S. states where cannabis is legal already offer it in food such as sushi, pizza and pastas.)

The federal government is delaying the legalizati­on of edibles — users will only be able to buy dried cannabis, oils, seeds and plants next year — but will someday regulate the sale of cannabis in food form.

“It’s something that I think is going to take off pretty soon because a lot of people who use it don’t want to smoke it,” Cacchione said. “People enjoy ingesting it and how it feels in that form.”

Aurora Lybarger, 26, came to the fair with a plastic folder stuffed with resumes.

Lybarger said she likes her landscapin­g job, but dreads the thought of another lean winter spent hunting for part-time work. She briefly went on EI for the first time last year and vows to never do so again. She hopes to enter the cannabis industry in trimming, cultivatio­n or sales.

“I just figure it’s booming. There’s huge opportunit­y right now and I might as well try and see what it’s like,” said Lybarger, who is from Surrey.

She met with recruiters from Cannabis At Work, Aurora Cannabis and several other firms looking to hire accountant­s, laboratory technician­s, IT staff and dozens of other positions. Close to 300 people had pre-registered for the fair, according to organizers.

Lybarger said she has used cannabis for insomnia and skin irritation. She believes in its therapeuti­c use and has found that those in the industry have good attitudes and enjoy their work.

Her boyfriend, Conrad Lambertus, also 26, works in pest control and heard from recruiters that his skills are in demand at production facilities, where growers can lose valuable crops to aphids and mites.

David Purcell, director of emerging business for Kwantlen Polytechni­c University’s two-year-old cannabis program, said that with prediction­s of 50,000 to 150,000 positions being created by legalizati­on, the program must constantly tweak its curriculum and course offerings to satisfy evolving industry demand and government regulation­s.

With little known about how the federal government plans to handle production and how the province plans to handle distributi­on, students must be ready for whatever is to come, he said.

Kwantlen’s program offers four courses covering topics such as plant production, marketing, financing and plant science. Next year, it will train people to become cultivatio­n technician­s and retail consultant­s.

“The general public will soon realize that this industry is full of very well-educated, highly trained individual­s,” Purcell said.

 ?? NICK PROCAYLO ?? Marco Cacchione checks out displays at the National Institute for Cannabis Health and Education job fair in Vancouver, Thursday.
NICK PROCAYLO Marco Cacchione checks out displays at the National Institute for Cannabis Health and Education job fair in Vancouver, Thursday.

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