With dozens of pot shops popping up across northern Ontario, legal weed market could be at 'saturation point' - Action News
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Sudbury

With dozens of pot shops popping up across northern Ontario, legal weed market could be at 'saturation point'

It's been nearly three years since legal cannabis arrived in northern Ontario and the number of stores where you can buy pot has exploded. But exactly how big the local marijuana market is remains very hazy.

$87 million in cannabis sales in northern Ontario in 2021, up from $15 million in 2020

A man, Jamy McKenzie, displays cannabis products on the shelf of a store in Sudbury.
Jamy McKenzie is the manager of the Pop's Cannabis store in the Hanmer area of Greater Sudbury. (Erik White/CBC)

The typical northern Ontario town has a post office, a grocery store, beer store, hardware store and now a pot shop.

The Pop's Cannabis store in the Hanmer area of Greater Sudbury is sandwiched between a bank and a pharmacy.

Store managerJamy McKenzie saidsome customers are just noticing the storenow, because they haven't been "shouting from the mountain tops."

"We don't want to disrupt the community. We want to be a part of it. We want to contribute to it," he said.

Cannabis stores have become a big part of northern communities with 88 dispensaries now licensed in the region, including 24 in Greater Sudbury, 17 in North Bay, 11 in Sault Ste. Marie, ten in Timmins and at least one or two in most fair-sized towns.

Legalization got off to a slow start in Ontario, with the Liberal plan for a chain of LCBO-like dispensaries suddenly scrapped when the Progressive Conservatives came to power.

After a lottery system to decide the first few licenses, with a set number allowed in each region, the province opened up the marketin December 2019 and now the regulations for opening a cannabis store are similar to getting a liquor license for a bar or restaurant.

Pop's Cannabis is focused on small Ontario towns, including Kapuskasing, Kirkland Lake and Sturgeon Falls, and wants to be seen as part of the main street along with banks, pharmacies and grocery stores. (Erik White/CBC )

"The province sort of opened up in a trickle and now it's a full on flood," said Jay Rosenthal, managing director of a trade publicationcalled The Business of Cannabis.

He saidthose floodgates opened right before the pandemic, so many were caught off guard to see all these pot shops popping up in their neighbourhood.

Sales in northern Ontario jumped from 1.7 million grams at $15 million in 2020 to 10.7 million grams for $87 million last year.

"Arguably we're probably past the saturation point," said Eugene Konarev, brand creator of Highlife, whose store in Sudbury was the first licensed cannabis retailer in northern Ontario.

Highlife now has a store in Sault Ste. Marie and plans for locations in Hanmer and Lively as well, but Konarev says sales are "somewhat flat" with all the new competitors.

He saidhe can tell that cannabis stores"entered the mainstream" over the last threeyears whenever he talks to landlords about renting space.

"They were extremely hesitant before, they're probably also as hesitant and scared today, but for different reasons," said Konarev.

A sign reading Highlife with its logo
Highlife in Sudbury was the first cannabis store licensed to open in northern Ontario in 2019. It now has 16 stores across the province, including six in the north. (Erik White/CBC )

He saidwhile landlords sawcannabis as a "questionable" tenant three years ago, often charging higher rents, today they're more concerned with a store having a strong business plan to be able to survive in such a crowded marketplace.

"As difficult as it is to turn a profit in this saturated market,if your rent is three times that of your neighbour, you probably won't survive for long," he said.

Robert Carroll is CEO of Due North Cannabis with two locations in Sault Ste. Marie and plans for a third.

His father once sold grow lights to medicinal producers and he wrote a paper in business school about the cannabis industry, so has been wanting to work in this fieldfor years, but doesn't think that's the case with all the pot-preneurs.

Due North Cannabis, with two locations in Sault Ste. Marie so far and a third in the works, has tried to stand out from the pack with a "Canadiana" identity. (Due North Cannabis)

"Kind of thought it would be a get rich quick sort of deal, but margins are not huge," said Carroll.

"Just opening a store on almost any corner and being able to attract customers, I think those days are kind of behind us."

Pop's Cannabis opened its first store in Sturgeon Falls last year and now has a dozen locations, including in Kirkland Lake and Kapuskasing.

President Ryan Dymond saidhe hopes all the new cannabis stores can survive in the long run but "logistically it's just not likely."

"Strategy shifts a little bit," he said.

"We were a little aggressive out of the gate... we opened 12 locations in seven months and now I'm just slowing that rollout."

Luc Dinnissensaidheand his wife have been"avid cannabis fans or connoisseurs or users for a long time" andhad a "pipe dream" of one day having a legal pot shop.

The couple opened Off the Stem in March next to the convenience store they also own in Kapuskasing.

Luc Dinnissen and his family have gone into the cannabis business, opening Off the Stem next to their convenience store in Kapuskasing. (Off the Stem )

He saidsmall towns are"usually a little bit behind" the bigger centres when it comes to new things, but a second cannabis store opened a few months after them.

"It's kind of hard to gauge if we've reached the top of the market in our area. It might be possible for us both to survive here," Dinnissen said.

"Time will tell."

Some industry analysts said that a good ratio is one cannabis store per 7,500 people, others put it closer to 50,000 people for one dispensary.

Jay Rosenthal, the managing director of Business of Cannabis, says there's likely to be a 'blood letting' in the industry following the explosion of retail stores. (Business of Cannabis)

Rosenthal saidthe big question for future growthis how many people are still buying from the black market and how to move them over to legal weed, with some pegging it at 30 per cent andothers saying that close to half of the potential customers are still buying from illicit sellers, what the industry now calls "the legacy market."

"We will start to see what the right number and mix of stores is for every community," he said.

"If we had a 100 per cent increase in coffee shops next year, not all of them would stay open."