Pot retailers still bullish on northern Ontario despite 'bumps in the road' - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 11:41 AM | Calgary | -13.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Sudbury

Pot retailers still bullish on northern Ontario despite 'bumps in the road'

The Ontario government is bringing in an open market for stores selling legal weed. But what this will mean for the cannabis business in the northeastincluding the 19 stores hoping to open in the new year is still unclear.

Northeastern Ontario has two cannabis stores, plus another 19 hoping to open in 2020

Ontario has announced it is opening up the retail cannabis in 2020, just as 19 proposed pot shops in northeastern Ontario continue to work through the existing approval process. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

Highlife in Sudbury was supposed to be northern Ontario's first legal pot shop.

But weeks of delays in getting a licence from the province saw it fall behind its crosstown rival Cana Cabana and the owners even paid a fine for not opening on time this past spring.

The Ontario government now plans to license as many as 20 marijuana stores per month starting in spring 2020.

But Highlife doesn't find that unfair.

"No! We think it's great. We think it's fantastic. We're fully supportive of the market opening up," says Sudbury store general manager Felicia Fahey, who adds that her store is one of the top pot sellers in Ontario.

"It's a new industry and everybody is anticipating that there was going to be some bumps in the road. You know it took 100 years for the LCBOto get where it was. And we're not going to do it overnight."

Highlife opened its Sudbury store in May 2019 and says the new open market will allow it to expand its chain across Ontario. (Erik White/CBC )

The Ontario government is also allowing companies to own as many as 10 cannabis stores next year and as many as 75 by September 2021, where chains were previously forbidden.

That's good news for companies like Highlife and Canopy Growth, which is planning to open one of its Tokyo Smoke stores in North Bay this spring.

"We're very excited about it," says Canopy's franchising director Melissa Gallagher.

"I think that, you know, this is the province putting the customers first."

The North Bay store was part of the second licence lottery the province held in August, along with Timmins and Sault Ste. Marie.

The North Bay winner was a Toronto divorce lawyer, who is now working with Canopy through the provincial approval process.

In theory it's possible that these new open market stores the province will start licensing in April couldopen their doors before the second round lottery winners.

It isdefinitely about to be a much morecompetitivemarketplace, but Gallagher says her company isn't worried about the viability of the yet-to-openNorth Bay store.

"You know, we've opened stores in small communities right across Canada and it's been an overwhelming response in the communities where we operate, so I don't anticipate North Bay would be any different," she says.

Weed has been legal in Canada for one year, but many people continue to buy from black market sources. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

The open market would make it easier for local entrepreneurs in northern Ontario towns and cities to get into the cannabis business.

Rob Waddell, who has sold marijuana pipes and other accessories at his Planetary Pride store in Sault Ste. Marie for 20 years, says he isn't interested inselling provincially-regulatedpot.

"The profit margins aren't really there. It's pricey. Quality is in question,"says Waddell, whosays most people still buy from the black market or grow their own marijuana.

Ontario First Nations have the authority to set their own cannabis laws and license their own retail outlets.

But Nipissing First Nation Chief Scott McLeod says because federal law still requires those stores tobuy from a provincial regulatory body, the sovereignty of Indigenous communities have been "side-stepped" by the Canadian government.

He says talks are underway to correct that.In the meantime, McLeod and his council have created a sort of open market in their own community.

Nipissing First Nation Chief Scott McLeod says he and his council are allowing provincially-regulated pot shops on their territory, but want the federal government to give First Nations more control over the cannabis business. (Erik White/CBC)

There are six different cannabis retailers working through the provincial licensing process that want to open up on Nipissing First Nation in the new year.

"We just didn't feel it was up to us to be the pickers of the winners and losers in this," says McLeod.

Those provincially-regulated retailers will still need to obey by Nipissing's cannabis laws, including not selling to anyone under 21, while Ontario set the minimum age at 19.

The Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario is also working on licensing proposed cannabis stores in Chapleau Cree First Nation, Mississauga First Nation, Serpent River First Nation,Sagamok Anishnawbek,WikwemikongUnceded Territory, Wahgoshig First Nation, Atikameksheng Anishnawbek, Magnetawan First Nation and Shawanaga First Nation.