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Old Posted Feb 7, 2014, 12:27 AM
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Legal Marijuana in the NCR

Zoning proposal to allow medical marijuana facilities

Ottawa city planners suggest licenced medical marijuana facilities in industrial zones

By Kate Porter, CBC News Posted: Feb 05, 2014 8:19 PM ET Last Updated: Feb 06, 2014 7:17 AM ET


Ottawa's planning committee will consider a new zoning proposal that would allow federally-licensed medicinal marijuana facilities to set up in the city's industrial areas.

City planners drafted the proposal after Health Canada changed the system through which patients obtain medicinal marijuana.

Patients will no longer be able to get licences to grow plants in homes as of Apr. 1, 2014. Instead, licenced commercial growers will produce and ship medicinal marijuana directly to patients.

Given the prospect companies could set up in the Ottawa area, planners determined the facilities are more like pharmaceutical manufacturing plants than a greenhouses, and should be allowed in industrial rather than agricultural zones.

Since residents expressed fears that fumes or odours could emanate from the growing of marijuana, planners suggested no facility be located within 150-metres of a residential or institutional area, even though they said federal regulations should ensure no odour escapes.

No new industrial zones: planners

The 150-metre buffer means some small industrial areas in the centre of the city will be off limits entirely.

Maps of the areas where medical marijuana facilities would be allowed show many small zones dotting Ottawa's rural countryside, as well as established industrial areas, such as where technology firms are located in Kanata North and an industrial park at Colonnade Road.

"We are not rezoning additional industrial lands to accommodate this use," said city planner Carol Ruddy. "There are already general manufacturing and light industrial uses and heavy industrial uses permitted in these locations and this is just another use that will also be permitted."

24-hour security for marijuana producers: business owner

One business owner in an industrial park along Sheffield Road supported the proposal that marijuana production be added to the area's zoning.

"You don't want your neighbour next door growing marijuana," said Rob Vanderkuip, owner of a laminating and braille signage company called Terra Reproductions. "But if it was in a separate building in this industrial area, that would not bother me."

Vanderkuip said he hoped any medicinal marijuana facility would have 24-hour security in case the business attracted the wrong people. On the whole, he preferred Health Canada's new system of commercial growers to the previous one of allowing plants to be grown in residential areas.

"At least you know where they're growing it. They're not growing it in one of my houses in Barrhaven, so you have that control factor," Vanderkuip said.

Planning committee is expected to consider the report to amend the zoning on Tuesday.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa...ties-1.2524837
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  #2  
Old Posted Feb 7, 2014, 12:32 AM
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And here's the City of Ottawa website on the subject:
http://ottawa.ca/en/city-hall/public...ical-marihuana

Interestingly, nobody at the City knows how to properly spell marijuana, which led me to this article:

Quote:
Why does the Government of Canada still insist on calling it ‘Marihuana’?

Marc Weisblott
Published: October 23, 2013, 1:00 pm


As the debate about the place of cannabis in polite Canadian society has accelerated, along with steps to further legitimize its distribution for medicinal purposes, one specific quirk has seemed to draw an increasing amount of attention: How the government spells a certain nine-letter synonym.

“Marihuana” has remained the standard in most federal communications, in order to remain consistent, even though the choice of more phonetic Mexican Spanish spelling preceded common recreational use and its regular appearance in the news media as “marijuana.”

The clash between the legal “h” and casual “j” has also persisted in several states south of the border. But a definitive answer about why has remained elusive — even to the High Times magazine editorial board.

Nonetheless, the standard spelling dictated by The Canadian Press does not cut “marihuana” any slack as “marijuana” has long been established in the English language.

As a result, journalists, politicians and others inclined to follow police departments on Twitter cannot avoid remarking upon how unusual it looks, whatever the context.

Most recently, the spelling was featured in the new Marihuana for Medical Purposes Regulations that were introduced in late September.

An inquiry about the aversion to the “j” generated this official response from Health Canada:

“Marihuana with an ‘h’ is one of a number of recognized spellings in the Oxford English Dictionary. While the spelling with a ‘j’ has been retained in US statute, the ‘h’ has been retained in European statutes, including in the U.K. and France. This is the spelling retained in Canadian statute.”

But with new businesses seeking to take advantage of the legal status of marijuana has come an apparent difference of opinion about how it should be spelled in order to be taken seriously.

National Access Canada, based in Vancouver, has introduced what it pointedly calls a Medical Marihuana Card — which is geared to ensuring that patients can efficiently access dispensaries that have implemented traditional pharmaceutical software.

The service was developed by Alex Abellan, who determined that the “h” was essential to distinguish his effort from anything recreational.

But a pharmaceutical company seeking to draw a similar distinction, MediJean, has opted for the familiar spelling of marijuana as it launches a campaign to distinguish its medicinal offerings from what it calls “street pot” — which includes an effort to spread the message that unlicensed cannabis that is potentially sprayed with window cleaner is probably not good for your health.

Anton Mattadeen, the chief strategy officer of MediJean, explains that the company did considerable research into its marketing effort — which includes the launch of a website designed to spark a national online debate — although a spelling that would seem strange to most Canadians was avoided.

Nonetheless, he points out that any correspondence between the company and the government continues to involve spelling the stuff “marihuana” — even as most of the nation wonders why.

twitter.com/scroll © COPYRIGHT - POSTMEDIA NEWS

http://o.canada.com/health/marijuana...spelling-what/
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Old Posted Feb 7, 2014, 12:41 AM
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Originally Posted by rocketphish View Post
And here's the City of Ottawa website on the subject:
http://ottawa.ca/en/city-hall/public...ical-marihuana

Interestingly, nobody at the City knows how to properly spell marijuana, which led me to this article:
I was actually surprised that the staff planner on the file was allowed to be interviewed on cbc radio about this.....typically, the City make interviews like that go through multiple channels etc and then a non-descript spokesperson delivers a bland response to the media. It was a refreshing change..the planner in question was quite engaging.
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Old Posted Feb 7, 2014, 2:00 AM
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Because the planner had been toking a spliff!

It's reefer madness!!!
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  #5  
Old Posted Jun 3, 2014, 5:51 PM
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Company challenges city's buffer rules on medical marijuana facilities

Carys Mills, Ottawa Citizen
Published on: June 2, 2014, Last Updated: June 3, 2014 12:27 PM EDT


A fight is brewing over how close future legal marijuana grow operations can be to homes and buildings such as schools and recreation centres in Ottawa.

A local company is challenging 150-metre buffer zones mandated by the city of Ottawa and it’s taking the issue to the Ontario Municipal Board, which has the power to overturn city council’s decision.

Those in favour of the buffer zone have cited concerns about noise and odours escaping from medical marijuana facilities. But a lawyer representing Stittsville-based Cannabis Canada Medical Inc. said the rule is “excessive and does not reflect the real risks” of the production plants.

At the moment the argument is largely theoretical, since no companies in Ottawa are known to have received a production licence from Health Canada. But the challenge to the zoning bylaw amendment, which is scheduled to be heard by the OMB on Aug. 28, argues the city’s rules could hurt a growing industry that is steadily seeing more licenses.

Many municipalities, including Ottawa, amended bylaws earlier this year to control where the legalized facilities can go. The rules were put in place before the federal government’s change to Canada’s medical marijuana regime, which as of April 1 restricts production to heavily regulated private producers.

Any Ottawa licensed facilities would have to be in an industrial area with a 150-metre buffer from residential or institutional zones, where facilities like schools and community centres are.

Ottawa’s setback, which is more than double Toronto’s 70-metre separation, is the focus of the appeal that was filed in March on behalf of Cannabis Canada Medical Inc.’s president Peter Crowe.

Crowe did not respond to several requests for comment. His lawyer, Joshua Moon, said this week that his client had not given him instructions to speak to a reporter.

The appeal argues reasons for the buffer zone, including noise and air quality concerns, “are not warranted given the nature of the use and strenuous regulations imposed by Health Canada,” such as preventing odours from escaping the building and the prohibition of loud noise. Comparable land uses – including indoor agricultural and medical labs – don’t require similar buffers, Moon wrote.

City planning lawyer Tim Marc said in an email that Ottawa is planning to proceed to an OMB hearing, not mediation or a pre-hearing conference, which was suggested as a possibility in the appeal.

“We note that other municipalities across Canada are setting similar or even larger setbacks,” Marc said.

Other areas in Ontario, including Port Colborne and Norfolk County, have chosen 150-metre buffers to other land uses. One example of a larger buffer zone is Rocky View County, just outside of Calgary, where production facilities have to go in commercially-zoned land that’s at least 400 metres away from homes or schools.

Marc pointed to the report that went to planning committee in February, which said a 150-metre setback helped address potential impacts of the new “industrial-type” land use and public concerns raised about adjacent homes.

Before a city planning committee, Crowe wrote to city staff, the mayor and council. He outlined his concerns, including the short notice about the new city rules and that grow ops should be treated as medical facilities, not industrial sites.

“Staff have used a sledgehammer to regulate and control an otherwise innocuous use regulated at the federal level in a strict way,” Crowe wrote.

The rules “could have an unfounded negative impact on our company in the years ahead as we grow and require different accommodations,” he said, adding there seemed to be no “scientific calculations” for the selected buffer zones.

Ottawa isn’t the only municipality facing challenges on marijuana rules. City of Toronto spokesman Bruce Hawkins confirmed rules there have been appealed to the OMB.

Toronto-based land-use lawyer Peter Gross, who has been monitoring Ontario’s municipal marijuana rules, said varying responses across the province raise two questions: Do medical marijuana facilities need a buffer zone? And if so, how much of one?

A report he wrote last month said some municipalities, including Windsor and and Smiths Falls, have no setbacks. Buffers elsewhere include 70 metres and 150 metres within industrial zones, although there’s also variation in the zones where grow ops are allowed.

“The municipalities are imposing setbacks in varying degrees that don’t seem to be subjected to any sort of scientific basis,” he said.

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http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-...ana-facilities
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Old Posted Sep 8, 2017, 11:38 AM
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Greely-area greenhouses could become Ottawa's first legal grow-op

Jon Willing, Ottawa Citizen
Published on: September 7, 2017 | Last Updated: September 7, 2017 5:45 PM EDT




Greenhouses on a property in rural south Ottawa could become the city’s first legal marijuana grow operation if council approves the location and the company receives a licence from Health Canada.

Artiva, which is the medical cannabis arm of LiveWell Foods, wants to establish its indoor grow-op at 5130-5208 Ramsayville Rd. outside Greely, near the Hawthorne Industrial Park.

The three-phase plan, outlined in a planning application filed at city hall, details how 549,000 square feet of greenhouse space would be converted from food production to marijuana production. A second production facility would also be added to the property.

“Because we’re setting a precedent, the city is making sure everything is in order, which is fine,” LiveWell co-CEO Seann Poli said Thursday in a phone interview from Calgary.

“At this point we’re not seeing any resistance.”

Artiva’s application to be a licensed medical marijuana producer is under review by Health Canada.

The federal government decides who can get a medical marijuana production licence. Health Canada had issued 58 licences as of Thursday. Of those, 32 licences were for producers in Ontario.

When it comes to the municipal government, a potential roadblock for Artiva could be the city’s relatively young regulations on where medical marijuana production facilities can be located.

Federal regulations on marijuana production forced council in February 2014 to decide where the facilities are allowed. Because the city believed a medical marijuana grow-op resembled a pharmaceutical producer, staff recommended, and council accepted, that the facilities only be located in industrial zones.

The city didn’t want facilities placed in agricultural zones, fearing that building an indoor grow-op would damage good soil meant for farming use. The bylaw also restricts the facilities from being located within 150 metres of residential and institutional zones.

Since the federal Liberals want to legalize pot by next July, the City of Ottawa might need to consider the municipality’s role in marijuana production. Council will also need to figure out if it needs to regulate where marijuana sales can happen once pot becomes legal. The city can use zoning bylaws to place restrictions on properties, but it largely depends on how the province decides where marijuana will be sold.

On the production aspect, Artiva’s application is a little different from what was contemplated in the city’s medical grow-op rules. The company wouldn’t be constructing new buildings on its agriculture-zoned property; it would use the existing greenhouses for marijuana production.

In a planning rationale document for the proposed production facility, Artiva’s consultant argues the proposal fits with both city and provincial policies on agricultural land use. A municipal drain that runs through the property won’t be adversely affected, the document says.

Poli said it’s simply a matter of changing the crops grown in the greenhouse, with the exception of additional federal security requirements for the property.

“It’s very, very demanding, which is a good thing because it’s medicine,” Poli said.

Approving the application could open the door to other property owners in Ottawa’s agriculture zones seeking marijuana grow-ops for existing building footprints.

Coun. George Darouze, who represents the area of the proposed Artiva grow-op, said he was surprised to learn about the land-use application. For years, he’s been fielding questions from people asking if there’s any land available in Osgoode ward to produce marijuana. He told them good luck finding an appropriate site that meets the zoning restrictions.

“I was shocked to see something materialize,” Darouze said.

Darouze said he’ll consult with city planners and his constituents to decide how to handle Artiva’s application.

Artiva zeroed in on the Ramsayville Road farm after Poli received information about the property from a minority shareholder who lives near the greenhouses. The family that currently owns the farm grows mini cucumbers, eggplants and zucchini. If Health Canada allows food crops on the balance of the property, Artiva is interested in continuing to grow the vegetables, Poli said.

The company is also keen on seeking any licences that would allow it to grow recreational marijuana in the future, Poli said.

Poli has aspirations for Artiva to be one of the largest marijuana producers in the country and have the prime minister visit the operations.

“I envision Trudeau doing a ribbon-cutting early next year,” Poli said.

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twitter.com/JonathanWilling

http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-...-legal-grow-op
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  #7  
Old Posted Feb 1, 2018, 1:07 PM
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"In Canada, which is moving toward legalization of recreational marijuana this year, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has warned that for now, the police and prosecutors will continue to treat pot sales as a crime.

“We recognize that anyone who is currently purchasing marijuana is participating in illegal activity that is funding criminal organizations and street gangs, and therefore we do not want to encourage, in any way, people to engage in that behavior until the law has changed,” Mr. Trudeau told reporters."

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/31/u...francisco.html
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  #8  
Old Posted Feb 9, 2023, 7:41 PM
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Couldn't find a better spot for this. This is quite devastating for Smiths Falls, but at least they will keep their facility across the street from the old Hershey Factory.

Quote:
UPDATED: Cannabis firm Canopy Growth to lay off 800, close Smiths Falls HQ

Canadian Press, February 9, 2023

Canopy Growth Corp. will lay off 800 workers as part of a transformation plan that will see the company close its hallmark 1 Hershey facility in Smiths Falls and consolidate some of its cultivation operations.

The Smiths Falls-based cannabis company said Thursday that the layoff will affect 35 per cent of its workforce, with 40 per cent of the cuts happening immediately and the remainder taking place over the next several months.

The move is meant to help the company behind brands like Tweed, Quatreau, Doja and Ace Valley reach profitability and enable sustainable and long-term growth. Both have become difficult because the illicit market still captures about 40 per cent of all pot sales and the Canadian cannabis sector is valued below the $7 billion that was once projected, said David Klein, Canopy Growth’s chief executive.

“We expect the sector challenges to remain for years to come and as a result, the sustainability of this legal sector is in question,” he said Thursday on a call with analysts.

Canopy’s share price tumbled 15 per cent to $3.11 in midday trading after the company revealed its net loss amounted to $266.7 million or 54 cents per diluted share for the third quarter, which ended Dec. 31. The result compared with a net loss of $115.5 million or 28 cents per diluted share in the same quarter a year earlier.

Canopy said the larger loss was driven primarily by non-cash, fair-value changes and an increase in asset impairment and restructuring costs.

Net revenue for the quarter totalled $101.2 million, down from $141 million a year earlier.

As a result of the measures announced Thursday, Canopy will take a pre-tax charge between $425 million and $525 million, but hopes to achieve savings between $140 and $160 million in the next 12 months.

Staffing cuts to cultivation, manufacturing and other areas of operations will deliver $45 million to $50 million in annualized cost of goods sold savings alone, said Judy Hong, the company’s chief financial officer, on the same call as Klein.

Other savings will come from winding down operations at 1 Hershey Dr. in Smiths Falls, where chocolate company Hershey once had a factory.

One Hershey, which has long been Canopy’s headquarters, was the company’s main site for flower and edibles production, but also housed office space.

The company will now complete post-production flower activity at 99 Lorne St., which is across the street from 1 Hershey and already has a regional distribution centre, bottling facility and beverage capabilities.

Canopy will also cease to source flower from its Mirabel, Que., facility, which is owned and operated through Les Serres Vert Cannabis Inc., a joint venture partnership between the company and Les Serres Stephane Bertrand Inc., a tomato greenhouse operator.

Canopy previously purchased pot from the joint venture, but will cease that activity and now move to a more flexible sourcing strategy to ensure Quebec-grown products are brought to consumers in the province.

The company is still in discussions about the long-term future of the site, Klein said.

Rounding out the facility changes will be the consolidation of cultivation at Canopy’s sites in Kincardine and Kelowna, B.C.

As the company transitions its facilities and operations, it will work to balance in-house with third-party manufacturing by focusing internal capabilities on flower, pre-rolls, softgel capsules and oils. It will rely on third parties when sourcing vapes, beverages, edibles and extracts.

The final part of the changes comes in the form of a partnership with Quebec-based EXKA, which holds the world’s largest cannabis library. The company will now manage Canopy’s genetics program, ensuring Canopy can preserve its investments in genetics but also receive optimized strains and new cultivars.

Canopy’s transformation plan comes after years of Canadian pot companies slashing workforces and tightening operations in a bid to reach their long-awaited goal of profitability.

Making the goal tough to reach has been the strength of the illicit market, a slow move toward federal legalization in the U.S. and sales that have underwhelmed when compared with lofty estimates some cannabis company executives first foresaw for the industry.

“Today there are two very different cannabis markets in Canada: one that is legal, highly taxed and regulated and one that is thriving and illicit,” Klein said.

“The unregulated, illicit market is generating billions of dollars of dollars of revenue with 40 per cent of market share and faces virtually no risk of enforcement.”

The Ontario Cannabis Store said in March that the illicit market share is 43 per cent.

As a result, the legal sector is forced to compete on price “out of necessity,” Klein said.

The average price for cannabis was $11.78 per gram at the start of 2019, shortly after legalization, but fell to $7.50 per gram in 2021, a November report from Deloitte Canada and cannabis research firms Hifyre and BDSA said.

The average price for vape cartridges has similarly fallen by 41 per cent from $32.02 per gram around legalization to $19 per gram a year later.

Such drops have prodded Canopy into refocusing its product mix on the premium sector, which typically commands higher prices and generates a more loyal consumer basis than value items.

“We deliberately chose not to chase the value segment, which has had a dampening effect on our top line because of the growth of that segment,” Klein admitted.

“We didn’t believe we could build a profitable, sustainable business at the value level in the Canadian market.”

The move toward premium was coupled with an ongoing cost-cutting plan in recent years involving hundreds of job cuts, the retooling of Canopy’s facilities, reviewing procurement strategies, implementing flexible manufacturing processes and reducing third-party professional and office fees.

Canopy is also still awaiting shareholder approval for Canopy USA, a separate entity that will combine U.S. pot company Acreage Holdings Inc. with edibles businesses Wana Brands and Jetty Extracts.
https://obj.ca/cannabis-firm-canopy-...iths-falls-hq/
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Old Posted May 17, 2023, 2:40 PM
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That's indeed sad news. Such a sector, I think, will always be challenging, and it's hard to say how stable everything will be in the future. And the fact that such a huge percentage shares the illicit market makes everything even more complicated.
Yeah, the players in the sector over evaluated the demand and potential of legalized mamajuana. Feds are currently reviewing the structure of the market, so hopefully, they can bring down the taxes in order to make the legal dispensaries more competitive (assuming they pass the savings to the consumers).
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Old Posted Aug 17, 2023, 4:28 PM
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Interesting twist? Hersey returning? Full circle for the chocolate factory?

Quote:
Canopy Growth to sell Smiths Falls HQ back to Hershey

Cannabis company to sell Hershey Drive facility for $53M

Michelle Allan · CBC News · Posted: Aug 17, 2023

Cannabis company Canopy Growth Corp. announced Thursday it's shutting down its Smiths Falls, Ont., headquarters and selling the building back to its original owner, Hershey Canada Inc.

In a statement, Canopy Growth said it has entered into an agreement to sell the facility back to the chocolate maker for approximately $53 million.

Selling the facility was part of a "focused effort to reduce costs and further enhance our balance sheet," said Canopy Growth CEO David Klein in a statement.

Hershey confirmed to CBC that it has signed an agreement to purchase the 700,000-square-foot facility.

The purchase is "another step in our continuing investment in our supply chain network" that "provides us with the flexibility to support growth" Todd Scott, Hershey's senior communications manager, wrote in an email Thursday.

Last month, the company signed agreements with lenders to reduce its debt by $437 million over the next six months.

The Smiths Falls facility will be the seventh property Canopy Growth has sold since April 1. The sold properties will total $155 million.

Other cost-saving measures announced by Canopy Growth earlier this year include laying off 800 workers and consolidating some of its cultivation operations.

Challenging times for legal pot industry

Canopy Growth purchased the shuttered Hershey chocolate factory in Smiths Falls in 2017. At the time, the facility at 1 Hershey Dr. was the largest indoor cannabis production facility in Canada.

The building has served as Canopy Growth's main production facility for flower and edibles, and also housed office space.

The company will now complete post-production flower activity at 99 Lorne St., which is across the street from 1 Hershey Dr., and already houses a regional distribution centre and bottling facility for cannabis beverages.

This restructuring comes as the Canadian legal cannabis sector faces stiff competition from the still-thriving illicit market.

Smiths Falls mayor Shawn Pankow will make an announcement about the sale Thursday at 11 a.m.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottaw...shey-1.6938333
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Old Posted Aug 17, 2023, 7:08 PM
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I was just arriving in Smiths Falls this morning for work when the news broke on CBC. I didn't see people taking to the streets with glee or starting impromptu parades, but I'm sure they will be soon. Great news for poor ol' Smiths Falls.
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Old Posted Aug 20, 2023, 3:40 PM
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Can't wait for those new Hershey bars laden with ancient THC residue.
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Old Posted Aug 21, 2023, 10:37 PM
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Can't wait for those new Hershey bars laden with ancient THC residue.
Introducing Hershey's Edible™
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Old Posted Aug 22, 2023, 1:07 PM
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Does anyone else feel that there is an over-saturation of dispensaries around the city? I don't understand the point, as they all have to buy from OCS, and the price variation from one shop to another is negligible at best.

It's good news for Smiths falls though...
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Old Posted Aug 22, 2023, 1:21 PM
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Originally Posted by Davis137 View Post
Does anyone else feel that there is an over-saturation of dispensaries around the city? I don't understand the point, as they all have to buy from OCS, and the price variation from one shop to another is negligible at best.

It's good news for Smiths falls though...
It's a well documented fact that there's an oversaturation and shops struggle. The Province and Feds are studying ways to help by reviewing the law, which will likely result in lower taxes, I believe for producers and see if they pass on the savings.
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Old Posted Aug 22, 2023, 2:01 PM
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Originally Posted by Davis137 View Post
Does anyone else feel that there is an over-saturation of dispensaries around the city? I don't understand the point, as they all have to buy from OCS, and the price variation from one shop to another is negligible at best.

It's good news for Smiths falls though...
They all have to buy from OCS yes, but theirs cheaper and more expensive places. I find that some places can be charging $165 for something and another store like Oz store or Canna Cabana can have the same product for $110. I do agree it is becoming over saturated though.
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Old Posted Aug 22, 2023, 6:46 PM
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I think it's actually desaturating these days.
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Old Posted Sep 18, 2023, 3:22 PM
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The economic roller coaster of a small Ontario town fuelled by chocolate and cannabis

By Liam Fox The Canadian Press
Posted September 18, 2023


SMITHS FALLS, Ont. — A small eastern Ontario town that was once known as the province’s chocolate capital is preparing for the sweet return of Hershey’s.



“It’s like an old friend coming home after being gone for 15 years,” said Smiths Falls Mayor Shawn Pankow.

That return is the latest in a slew of changes around a facility that has been essential to the town’s identity and economic prosperity.

For 45 years.

Hershey’s once operated a factory in the community of around 9,000 people, which is located about 75 kilometres southwest of Ottawa.

There was an image of a chocolate bar on the water tower. School groups making field trips to the capital to see Parliament often sweetened the deal with a stop at the Hershey’s visitor centre.

The factory employed about 400 locals, including Richard Kirkwood, who worked there for 35 years.

“It was a good place to work. It paid my mortgage for 30 years,” he said, reminiscing about family barbecues, Christmas parties and track and field days organized by the company.

But that all changed in 2007 when Hershey’s outsourced the jobs to Mexico and closed shop.

Kirkwood said he was among the last to be laid off, but the suddenness of the closure left many people in the lurch. “Now I don’t have a paycheque, I’m not buying a new car, I’m not buying a new home. I’m just buying what I have to have.”

“The town was hurting,” Kirkwood said.

“We saw decline in our population, decline in our tax base, decline in revenues coming into our town,” said Pankow, who was first elected in 2010. “It left a real gap (that) took us a while to recover from.”

The town went through an identity crisis, too.

“It’s like, who are we now if we’re not Hershey town?” Pankow said of the time.

The legalization of recreational cannabis in 2018 brought on a brief economic high after Canopy Growth Corp. moved in to 1 Hershey Drive.

Canopy, best known for its Tweed brand, is one of Canada’s largest licensed cannabis growers. Its opening initially brought tourists from all over to see the so-called cannabis capital of Canada.

Tweed hyped up its opening, hosting an event on Aug. 25, 2018, featuring one of its most famous partners: Snoop Dogg. Sean Lawrence remembers locals looking on from their porches as the rapper smoked a blunt, months before the company started selling the cannabis-infused products it was making at the factory.

“There was an awful lot of hype in the cannabis industry,” said Lawrence, now the president of Smiths Falls chamber of commerce board. “I think people felt that it was going to take off more than it actually has.”

But he said strict government regulations on legal growers have hampered the market.

In February Canopy laid off 800 employees, around 35 per cent of its workforce, and announced it would sell the factory. Tweed will still employ just over 175 people in Smiths Falls at another facility.

It announced last month that it would sell the
700,000-square-foot facility back to its original owner for around
$53 million.

That has set the stage for a reunion, but the chocolate-maker is returning to a town that is very different from the one it left.

A growth in small businesses, population and housing has made the town less dependent on a single employer, said Lawrence.

“We’ve had a real economic boom in this town,” he said.

Smiths Falls has long endured boom-and-bust cycles, going back to the 19th century.

It was an important transportation hub in eastern Ontario after the construction of the Rideau Canal. The waterway that links Ottawa and Kingston was completed in 1832.

Smiths Falls also saw the rise and fall of steam engine railway transportation. It was chosen as the regional headquarters for the Canadian Pacific Railway’s main line in 1885, and the Canadian Northern Railway built a second line through the town in 1912.

But that good fortune came to a close with the rise of diesel engines and cars, putting the brakes on the railway repair, maintenance and service business.

After decades of decline, the town was stabilized by the opening of a centre for developmentally disabled people in 1951, which at its peak housed around 2,500 people and employed over 800.

The facility was abandoned in 2009 and was later named in a class-action lawsuit against two Ontario psychiatric institutions accused of abusing former residents. Former residents of the Rideau Regional Centre in Smiths Falls and the Huronia Regional Centre in Orillia settled the case for $32.7 million.

On a recent sunny Wednesday, the town’s heart of Beckwith Street was busy, with people stopping in at restaurants, cafes and shops.

Some of those are among the 43 new businesses that opened in 2021 and 2022, according to the municipality’s business survey.

Between 2016 and 2021 the town’s population grew by more than five per cent, and its median household income went up by nearly eight per cent. Unemployment has also lowered.

Municipal tax revenue increased by around 50 per cent over the last eight years, while the average annual tax rate hike was approximately 1.5 per cent. Its annual budget this year stands at $20.5 million.

Pankow said more than 500 new residential units have been developed since the 2021 census data was gathered, partially thanks to the urban exodus sparked by the COVID-19 pandemic, which saw city-dwellers from Ottawa and Toronto settle into smaller communities.

Lawrence said the sale of the old chocolate factory solidifies the recent growth, and he thinks Hershey’s is back for the long term.

Though details about the company’s reopening plans are scarce at the moment, optimism for the town’s future has never been higher.

“Let’s get the town back up and running again, and let’s get the smell of chocolate back in the air,” said Kirkwood.

https://globalnews.ca/news/9967782/s...late-cannabis/
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