Ontario to create cannabis control board, open up storefronts - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:05 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Ontario to create cannabis control board, open up storefronts

The Ontario government announced Friday it will create a cannabis control board and open up to 60 storefronts in the first year to manage the sale and distribution of marijuana in the province.

Illegal pot shops in Ontario to be shut down over next 12 months

The government of Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne is expected to announce Friday that it will create a cannabis control board and open up to 60 storefronts across the province to sell marijuana. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

The Ontario government announced Friday that it will create a cannabis control board and open up to 60 storefronts in the first year to manage the sale and distribution of marijuana in the province.

Ontario ministers announced the measures at morning press conference.

The plans include restricting marijuana sales to those 19 and older, a year above the minimum age recommended by the federal government's cannabis task force report in December.

The stores selling marijuana to the public will not be housed inside existing LCBO stores as Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynnehad previously suggested.

Illegal pot shops in Ontario would be shut down over the next 12 months.

In April, legislation was introduced in the House of Commons to legalize and regulate the sale and distribution of marijuana on or before July 1, 2018.

Many of the decisions about how the drug will be soldand taxed are being leftto the provinces.

At a premiers meeting in Edmonton in July, the premiers announced they would ask the federal government to postpone legalization ifissues related to road safety, taxation, training for distributors and public education are not addressed.

The premiers said they would report back on progress byNov. 1and would seek such anextension if thefederal timetable was deemed "unrealistic."

"The starting point is, have we met the public safety concerns, are we sure we have the provisions in place to protect youth, do we understand what the highway traffic implications are?" Wynne said at the time. "It's those issues that we have to resolve because we have to keep people safe."

Shortly after the premiers'announcement, Prime Minister Justin Trudeausaid his government intends to stick to the July2018 deadline.