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Alberta stores preparing as online cannabis sales to go private in March

Alberta stores preparing as online cannabis sales to go private in March

CBC
Monday, February 21, 2022 03:57:04 PM UTC

Alberta is changing how cannabis can be sold online as of March 8 — and some stores are scrambling to prepare.

A legal change, passed by the legislature last year, will see Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis (AGLC) shut down the online orders section of its website. This will open the online market to private sellers.

High Tide, which runs 58 Canna Cabana stores in Alberta and already sells cannabis online in Ontario, Manitoba and Saskatchewan, is anxious to expand its online reach in the province.

"We've done a pretty good job that we can operate online sales and home delivery in a safe, secure manner," chief revenue officer Andy Palalas said. "It's a big part of our strategy for addressing the illicit market."

The company is trying to iron out details with the AGLC to be ready to sell online and deliver as of March 8.

The AGLC will still supply cannabis products for sale. Anyone who wants to sell online in the province must already have a bricks-and-mortar retail store. There are currently 744 stores licensed in Alberta.

Businesses must use their own delivery people, or they can use Canada Post or a courier service.

Potential online sellers will have to clear some bureaucratic hurdles and meet AGLC standards. A store must apply to expand its licence to online sales, and AGLC inspectors must endorse any website before it goes live, according to spokesperson Karin Campbell.

The websites will also need a "robust" way to verify a shopper's age, to ensure kids aren't buying cannabis online, she said. Shoppers who look younger than 25 will also have to show ID when their delivery arrives.

The AGLC has yet to endorse any of the new private websites selling in Alberta, Campbell said.

It's too soon to say how many companies will be ready to sell online as of March 8, she said, but "many" have indicated they will be.

Not likely to be ready on that date is Fire & Flower, which operates 42 cannabis stores across Alberta.

"We're down to the wire in terms of timing, and based on the responses I've received so far, I'm not optimistic that March 8 will be the day that we first deliver in Alberta," said Matthew Anderson, vice-president of legal, business affairs and compliance with Fire & Flower.

Anderson is having trouble getting clarity from the AGLC on some regulatory issues, he added.

Read full story on CBC
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