Toronto cannabis store owner loses 'thousands of dollars' after OCS cyberattack delays deliveries
CBC
A Toronto cannabis store owner felt forced to reduce employees' hours to help mitigate the financial loss of marijuana deliveries delayed for days after a cyber attack on Ontario Cannabis Store's logistic partner.
Even still, Vivianne Wilson, founder of GreenPort, said, "I lost thousands of dollars, that's the reality."
Now, Wilson is hoping the cyber attack can help launch a conversation about how to improve the provincially-run delivery system she says doesn't make financial — or environmental — sense.
"Right now they have a complete monopoly on the industry and they don't work with retailers as partners and that's a huge failing," she said. "I'm hoping that we can go forward, that they can learn from this experience."
CBC Toronto asked the OCS to comment, but has not yet received a reply at the time of publication.
Wilson said she first got wind that her Monday delivery might not arrive on time last weekend, when OCS started sending emails alerting retailers that there was an issue at the distribution plant and shipments might be delayed. By Monday evening, she said OCS finally sent word that the delay would be much longer because of a cyber attack.
At the time, OCS said it was halting deliveries as a precaution after the parent company of its supply chain partner, Domain Logistics, was impacted by an Aug. 5 cyber attack.
The OCS said a forensic investigation by its third-party, cybersecurity experts and Domain Logistics determined no OCS distribution centre systems or customer data was compromised.
But many cannabis stores that must order from OCS went without pot deliveries for a week, with several saying supplies were so low they're worried they will lose customers.
Even once Wilson received her shipment on Thursday, she said it didn't include everything she'd ordered. Popular pre-rolls infused with kief — a potent form of cannabis — didn't show up. Her shelves, normally full, remain relatively empty.
"It's going to take a few days, or a few order cycles I should say, to get us back to a normal inventory level," Wilson said.
Wilson received an email from the OCS on Friday that Domain Logistics has "ramped up the fulfillment of retail store orders and deliveries."
She's hoping the delay serves as a wake up call that having one Guelph, Ont.-based distribution centre serving an entire province "is not financially responsible or environmentally responsible."
"Instead of building a system that can support the entire province, they've built a very tiny monopolized process that's clearly inefficient," Wilson said.
The Salvation Army can't fundraise in the Avalon Mall after this year. It all comes down to religion
This is the last Christmas season the Salvation Army's annual kettle campaign will be allowed in the Avalon Mall in St. John's, ending a decades-long tradition.