COMMENTARY: How buying Ontario’s legal pot will be like a blast from the past

gb123

Well-Known Member
Marijuana legalization is around the corner. Here's how it will affect the black market.

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The legalization of cannabis in Canada is on the horizon. Canadian provinces are taking different approaches to how it will be sold to the public.

The Ontario Cannabis Retail Corporation (OCRC) grabbed attention in April for identifying its first store locations. But it was the accompanying call for product suppliers that caught my eye as a business professor. It hints at OCRC’s future relationships with cannabis growers and consumers.


WATCH ABOVE: How will marijuana be marketed once it’s legalized?

Provincial approaches

Every province except Saskatchewan will use its liquor agency as the central distributor of recreational cannabis. The agencies will buy it from licensed growers and ship it to retailers. But each province will go its own way regarding how cannabis will be sold to consumers.

Western provinces will mostly rely on businesses for retail sales. Manitoba, for example, has accepted four applications for province-wide cannabis chains. Alberta saw 226 applications for independent stores in Calgary alone.

Meanwhile, eastern provinces will set up government-owned outlets. Nova Scotia will sell cannabis in nine liquor stores. Quebec’s liquor agency instead will set up dedicated stores. There will be at least four in Montreal.

Ontario likewise created OCRC as a liquor board subsidiary. But its cannabis stores will be separate from liquor outlets.

READ MORE: Justin Trudeau not backing down on timeline for legalizing marijuana despite calls for delay

Suppliers wanted

OCRC’s call most notably indicated that it doesn’t have any confirmed suppliers yet. Growers had until May 2, 2018, to submit offers. OCRC hopes shipments could begin June 1. But that optimistically leaves just four weeks to negotiate contracts and schedule deliveries.

By contrast, Quebec has already signed six supply contracts. Ontario lags with suppliers, despite leading in legislation. (Its law passed in December, whereas, for example, British Columbia just introduced its bill.)

Such delays could pose problems. Some observers expect temporary cannabis shortages initially. If OCRC doesn’t lock down supplies soon, it risks having bare shelves.

READ MORE: Growing 4 cannabis plants for recreational use is not a ‘grow-op,’ experts say

Pricing challenges

Quebec’s news also suggests financial challenges for cannabis retailers. Its largest supplier expects to receive $5.40 per gram wholesale. Meanwhile, Statistics Canada estimates illicit retail prices at $6.96.

That modest retail-wholesale difference suggests government retailers will lose money if they try competing with black markets.

Suppose OCRC charges $6.96 per gram while paying $5.40. After subtracting $1.80 of required taxes, it’ll lose $0.24 per gram. That’s even before paying operating costs.

Speaking of prices, politicians have repeatedly mentioned needing a legalized cannabis price that’s competitive with black markets. But OCRC asks suppliers to suggest a retail price for each product. So there will be many prices, not just one.

Just as fine wine costs more than basic plonk, premium cannabis will cost more than entry-level weed. Consumers can choose how to trade off quality versus price. Meanwhile, growers can compete on price to capture larger market shares.

READ MORE: The big surprise of cannabis legalization might be the size of the low dose market
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
Product specifications

Suppliers must also quantify their products’ chemical ingredients. These include the percentage of high-inducing tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and medically promising cannabidiol (CBD). All product shipments will require chemistry lab reports confirming those numbers.


Those requirements are a good start toward improving cannabis quality. They’ll help legal products develop reliable reputations with consumers and marketing advantages over street weed.

They also underline how legalized cannabis is industrializing. If existing illegal grow-ops want to go legit, they’ll need to become much more professional.


It’s not clear whether OCRC will test cannabis itself. It should follow the example of Ontario’s liquor board. That agency analyzed 28,000 alcoholic beverages last year.


READ MORE: Marketing marijuana after it is legalized



‘Temperance-era procedures’

On the retail side, a split-personality experience awaits Ontario shoppers. OCRC outlets will have the modern flair of computer stores and wine boutiques. But they’ll follow temperance-era procedures.


When you arrive at a store, you’ll first enter a lobby. Employees will check your ID before you proceed.

You’ll then move into a sales room full of computer screens and iPads. These will display health-related info, plus product details like brand name, THC content and price.


The computers and employees apparently will offer more wine-like descriptions too. Would you prefer “an earthy product with citrus notes?” Or one “hand-trimmed and sorted” instead?


 

gb123

Well-Known Member



A vendor trims marijuana with scissors during the annual 4-20 cannabis culture celebration at Sunset Beach in Vancouver on April 20, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck



What you won’t see, touch or smell before purchase is actual cannabis. That’s because Ontario laws require keeping cannabis hidden. You’ll select your products sight unseen. Employees will then fetch them from storage.

You presumably then will slink shame-facedly out the door. Your sinful purchases will fittingly be contained in federally mandated plain packages.


In effect, OCRC is reviving the procedures of liquor stores from 90 years past. This approach will make it tougher for legal growers to build brand reputations. That weakens their competitiveness with black markets.


At least New Brunswick’s government outlets will display products under glass. Consumers there can read labels and compare packaging before buying.



READ MORE: Your legal pot buying data could get you banned from the U.S., lawyers warn


Many unknowns

The federal legalization law is still under Senate review. Meanwhile, federal and provincial regulations are still in draft form. So, many unknowns remain.


For example, cannabis growers will face restrictions on advertising. But how strict will they be? Some firms aren’t waiting to learn. They’re already promoting their brands and products.


Another unknown is Ontario’s June 7 election result. The Progressive Conservatives may replace the whole retail concept if they win.


With all that, the next few months will be very busy for OCRC. I wish it and its newly appointed president good luck — they’ll need it.




what's to stop people from buying from the cheapest provinces ONLINE?? lol
no one has mentioned this yet lol..
so much for 10 dollar shags when ya can buy online for far less??
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
Full of fuckin BONEHEADS...too funny. Good luck pummeling the BM....lmao
Their plan is a dream come true for the BM...yippee
They are so gonna fail...then blame it on us. Fuck trudys ass bloody.
 

TheRealDman

Well-Known Member
OCRC hopes shipments could begin June 1. But that optimistically leaves just four weeks to negotiate contracts and schedule deliveries.
How can the OCRC take delivery of a product that not yet legal? LP’s are currently bound to ACMPR only...there’s no such thing as Rec MJ yet. If LP’s ship MJ outside of the ACMPR, is that not illegal?!?!

The earliest Rec MJ could be legal is June/8/18...and more likely, not until the following week of June/10/18.
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
How can the OCRC take delivery of a product that not yet legal? LP’s are currently bound to ACMPR only...there’s no such thing as Rec MJ yet. If LP’s ship MJ outside of the ACMPR, is that not illegal?!?!

The earliest Rec MJ could be legal is June/8/18...and more likely, not until the following week of June/10/18.
well its a store and its gonna be legal so...:shock::confused::confused::wall::wall:

anyone should think about opening one ...it's legal right?!?! :lol: :idea:(:(:

or it is with their thinking anyway. lol
 

WHATFG

Well-Known Member
How can the OCRC take delivery of a product that not yet legal? LP’s are currently bound to ACMPR only...there’s no such thing as Rec MJ yet. If LP’s ship MJ outside of the ACMPR, is that not illegal?!?!

The earliest Rec MJ could be legal is June/8/18...and more likely, not until the following week of June/10/18.
Buts that's different....lol...aren't LPs supposed be producing cannabis for patients?....how are they legally ramping up production with only so many patients to feed?...
 

HotKarl2

Well-Known Member
So they are gonna check your ID the article states. What it didn't state is if you look under 19? Or are we going to be scanning and logging everyone's info?
 

HotKarl2

Well-Known Member
The homeless will be banned cause they gots no id's.......no address.....no id...who needs it
What do you think I'm worried about? How am I expected to be able to buy poison schwag when I hitch tractor rides on my trailer to the nearest Walmart (they have free parking).
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
Your post connotates freedom. We cannot have that. Get back in your hole, Hippy. Look at the size of the building and lack of uniformed men taking your ID at the door. People might get ideas.
Piss off ya dirty comey..........What interest in my hole have you???
aaaaaa.jpg Takes a certain type of quality individual to live in a hole you know.
My summer outfit if you please
 

Somatek

Well-Known Member
How can the OCRC take delivery of a product that not yet legal? LP’s are currently bound to ACMPR only...there’s no such thing as Rec MJ yet. If LP’s ship MJ outside of the ACMPR, is that not illegal?!?!

The earliest Rec MJ could be legal is June/8/18...and more likely, not until the following week of June/10/18.

Royal assent usually takes 7-10 days after a bill makes it through both houses. It's possible it could be earlier since the gov is jamming this through but typically it'd be a week or so before it's enacted.

At this point they're just setting up supply contracts to stock their shelves after it's passed. LP's are already shipping product overseas, they're no longer tied directly to patients like the old MMAR but operate in a heavily regulated market. Harper's goal was to get rid of that/PPL/DG system, but the courts squashed that.

Signing distribution deals would be contingent on the bills passing, so there's no laws being broken. The gov has already said it'll take 3 month to get stores up, running & stocked. Everything will be stalled until the bill passes the senate then there will be a flurry of activity.
 

Somatek

Well-Known Member
"Suppose OCRC charges $6.96 per gram while paying $5.40. After subtracting $1.80 of required taxes, it’ll lose $0.24 per gram. That’s even before paying operating costs."

I think this will be the biggest issue, they have to get the price below the black market or people will ignore it. If it's cheaper & more convenient then people will switch. So far it sounds like it'll be less convenient, with less selection (no edibles or concentrates) & more expensive. Sounds like a winner to me...
 
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