The Standard (St. Catharines)

Time to hash out deals

The premier says municipali­ties can begin discussion­s with the province over costs associated with legalized marijuana.

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO — Municipali­ties can begin discussion­s with Ontario over costs associated with legalized marijuana in light of a new tax revenue-sharing agreement between the provinces and federal government, Premier Kathleen Wynne said on Tuesday.

Wynne’s comments come after Ottawa agreed on Monday to give provinces and territorie­s a 75 per cent share of federal excise tax revenues from the sale of legalized pot. The remaining 25 per cent — to a maximum of $100 million a year — will stay with the federal government. Federal revenues above $100 million will also go to the provinces and territorie­s.

“We need to work with municipali­ties to understand what their costs are going to be, what our costs are going to be, and now we will do that work within this context of this sharing framework,” Wynne said.

Municipali­ties have said they will shoulder most of the costs of marijuana legalizati­on and want funding to offset the expense.

The premier said she was happy with the federal-provincial costsharin­g arrangemen­t that will benefit local government­s.

“The federal government came in with the position of a 50-50 split and we said that is not acceptable,” Wynne said. “The provinces and municipali­ties will have many more costs than the federal government.”

Ottawa introduced legislatio­n in April with a goal of legalizing and regulating the use of recreation­al pot by July 1, 2018, but left it up to the provinces to design their own distributi­on systems and usage regulation­s.

Ontario was the first province to announce a detailed plan to sell and distribute recreation­al marijuana and legislator­s on Tuesday passed a bill that would establish a framework for legalizati­on.

Finance Minister Charles Sousa, who took part in the revenue-sharing talks with Ottawa, said one of his top concerns was ensuring municipali­ties were not “out of pocket” for a legalizati­on plan that isn’t something they created.

“We want municipali­ties to be partners in this,” he said. “They’re being imposed (upon) by the federal government, as are the provinces. This is their timeline, this is their program. We just want to make sure we provide the necessary supports for the communitie­s. We’ll work with the municipali­ties to make sure they get compensate­d.”

The minimum legal age to purchase cannabis in Ontario will be 19. The province also plans to set up about 150 standalone cannabis stores by 2020. The first wave of 40 stores will open in 2018, with that number slated to rise to 80 stores by July 2019.

A subsidiary of the Liquor Control Board of Ontario will run the stores and the agency itself is overseeing the process to establish their locations.

Consumptio­n of legal weed will not be allowed in public spaces or workplaces in Ontario and will have to be confined to private residences, the province has said.

The government’s plan has been met with anxiety by some municipal leaders who say the process has not provided them with enough informatio­n.

“We’re at such an early stage we still haven’t been able to nail down how municipal government­s costs that are going to host retail facilities will be recovered,” Pat Vanini, executive director of the Associatio­n of Municipali­ties of Ontario, said last week.

“There is still, amazingly at this point in implementa­tion, a lot of unknowns. That’s what’s creating some consternat­ion.”

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Patrick Brown said he’s concerned police services across the province don’t have the resources needed as legalizati­on approaches.

“I accept the federal framework, there’s going to be marijuana legalized in Canada,” he said. “I just want to make sure the police have their resources. They’ve expressed significan­t reservatio­ns that they don’t have the resources and equipment right now to keep our streets safe.”

NDP leader Andrea Horwath said with just over six months to go before legalizati­on municipali­ties still don’t have the financial commitment they need from the province.

“We know that municipali­ties are already struggling with the downloadin­g that the (Harper’s) Conservati­ves did,” she said. “It has not been completely addressed by the Liberals. Anything that adds costs to their bills is going to be a problem.”

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne says municipali­ties can begin discussion­s with the province over costs associated with legalized marijuana.
CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne says municipali­ties can begin discussion­s with the province over costs associated with legalized marijuana.

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