Cape Breton Post

Clear message

Ontario to sell pot online in fall, in private retail stores next year

- BY SHAWN JEFFORDS

Recreation­al cannabis will be sold online in Ontario when legalized this fall and in private retail stores across the province early next year, the government announced Monday, reversing the previous administra­tion’s plan to distribute cannabis through publicly owned outlets.

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ves, who took power at the end of June, said public safety was a top concern as they came up with the system, but critics said the new model could pose enforcemen­t and regulation challenges.

A government agency called the Ontario Cannabis Store will sell pot online once it is legalized on Oct. 17, and a “tightly regulated” private retail model will be in place by April 1, 2019. The OCS will also be the wholesaler to private retail stores, the government said.

“We will be ready to put in place a safe, legal system for cannabis retail that will protect consumers,” said Attorney General Caroline Mulroney. “We will be ready to work alongside municipali­ties, law enforcemen­t and Indigenous communitie­s to combat organized crime and the illegal market.”

The legal age to buy recreation­al cannabis will remain 19 and consumers will only be allowed to use legalized pot in a

private residence, including the outdoor space of the home.

Mulroney stressed that the government will “spare no expense” to protect children from marijuana when it’s legalized.

“Our message to kids, and all Ontarians, is clear,” she said. “Despite the upcoming legalizati­on of recreation­al cannabis use for responsibl­e adults, it is still a drug that poses risks to health and safety.”

Finance Minister Vic Fedeli said municipali­ties can opt out of hosting pot shops within their boundaries and stressed that the government will consult with them before moving forward with cannabis in private retail stores next spring.

Retailers will have to follow

a series of rules including prohibitin­g the sale of marijuana to anyone under 19, Fedeli said, noting that those selling to underage buyers will lose their licence.

“We will work with private sector businesses to build a safe, reliable retail system that will divert sales away from the illegal market,” he said.

Fedeli added that the online retail channel launching this fall will have a “robust verificati­on system” and will ensure safe home delivery for cannabis products.

The province also said it will learn from the private models being implemente­d in Manitoba, Saskatchew­an and Alberta.

The previous Liberal government had planned to give the Liquor Control Board of Ontario a monopoly on the sale of recreation­al cannabis, opening as many as 150 retail stores by 2020. The Tory government does not have a target number of stores it would like to introduce.

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said the most responsibl­e way to sell legal pot is through the public sector. She urged Premier Doug Ford to ensure the promised consultati­on on the private retail model is open, transparen­t and thorough.

“LCBO staff have the experience and training to ensure socially responsibl­e access,” she said. “The model selected by the government needs to push the criminal element out of the picture.”

Interim Liberal Leader John Fraser said the government has chosen a more complex model that could be harder to enforce.

“There will be greater challenges in terms of trying to manage it,” he said.

Robert Schwartz, a University of Toronto professor specializi­ng in cannabis distributi­on and public health, said it’s hard to imagine the Tory government’s private model would be safer than the previous plan.

“If privatizat­ion is meant that any store will be able to sell cannabis, then I would say that this is highly problemati­c given our experience with tobacco sales that are available 24 hours a day at every corner,” he said.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Ontario Minister of Finance Vic Fideli delivers remarks following an announceme­nt on Ontario’s cannabis retail model in Toronto on Monday.
CP PHOTO Ontario Minister of Finance Vic Fideli delivers remarks following an announceme­nt on Ontario’s cannabis retail model in Toronto on Monday.

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