Alberta to allow cannabis sales at adults-only events
CBC
Cannabis industry advocates are welcoming the Alberta's latest changes to rules around selling the product, including opening the door for sales at some festivals and events.
The provincial government announced updates to the Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis Regulation on Monday, set to take effect at the end of January.
The changes will allow licensed cannabis retailers to set up temporary sales at adults-only events, like trade shows and festivals. They also ease some of the restrictions around how store owners can transfer product between different locations and lift the requirement to store product in a secure area off the shop floor while the store is closed.
A statement from the province says the aim is to reduce barriers for businesses and "better combat the illegal market."
Diplomat Consulting president Nathan Mison, who advocates for cannabis regulatory changes, said allowing cannabis sales at events is an important step toward fostering new hospitality and tourism ventures.
"We believe that on-site sales for cannabis gardens, or thoughts like a cannabis and food festival, create a significant opportunity for us to show and steward those 'cannabis-curious' people who would be interested."
Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis (AGLC) still has to finalize the policies that accompany the changes.
A spokesperson for Alberta's Ministry of Service Alberta and Red Tape Reduction said in a statement that cannabis retailers would be allowed to sell product at events "that are exclusively adults-only."
Mison and other industry representatives have asked for broader access, with events allowed to set up areas that bar minors, like a beer garden, where cannabis could be sold and consumed.
In Edmonton and Calgary, city bylaws already allow smoking or vaping cannabis at outdoor festivals and public events, but only in designated areas. And in those cases, selling cannabis on site isn't allowed.
In 2018, Chris Felgate was Alberta's first cannabis retailer to finish all the regulatory approvals and get an AGLC licence to open his Devon store, Small Town Buds.
He said he's been calling ever since for the government to lift the condition that cannabis products have to be locked in a separate storeroom for closing hours.
"Early legalization, when I had to staff very heavy because there weren't a lot of stores open ... it was costing us about $40,000 or $45,000 a year to stock and take down our shelves," he said.
Felgate said he's managing his employment costs differently now, but he estimates that the process of moving all the product back and forth every day still costs him $25,000 per year.
The Rachel Notley government's consumer carbon tax wound up becoming a weapon the UCP wielded to drum the Alberta NDP out of office. But that levy-and-repayment program, and the wide-ranging "climate leadership plan" around it, also stood as the NDP's boldest, provincial-reputation-altering move in their single-term tenure.