There's definitely some opportunities the way the federal rules are setup. The key will be how each province handles it. Hopefully the provinces will publish details on their program. ON is not looking good at this point but we'll see what Ford brings to the table. No hurry for me, I'd just like to have something setup for "retirement", even if I could cover off costs I'd be happy & give me something to do.
So I searched and downloaded the regs and guides from some provinces (ON, NB, PEI, AB, BC). It's still a mish mash of federal and provincial rules/laws to put it all together. Not all are very clear at the provincial level, although some indicate that more information will be posted as it's ready. BC and AB seem to have the most open systems as far as retailing, if that's where you have an interest those look like the best bet. All of them seem to be scrambling to put programs together.
None have online sales as an option, none have nor likely to have options for selling direct to consumers other than the retail options in BC and AB. Without online and direct sales (other than retail) this is not looking good for what I'd like to do. I have no interest in a retail shop, that's the most costly and inefficient sales model there is for a small business. Thanks, but no thanks.
So, from the information available today, the HC provided guide here's my current take on options if you're a little guy and want to go legal (where allowed):
To grow plants, seeds, clones and sell them:
- Obtain a Micro Cultivation or Nursery license
- Obtain a Micro-Processing license
Note:
Anything that you produce with the above licenses can be sold to other licensed cultivators, processors, authorized researchers. Processing license also allows sales to other Federally Sale License holders (LP's), and Provincially Licensed/authorized sellers (e.g. in Ontario that would be the OCS, competing with larger LP's for price and shelf space). Thereby, by obtaining a cultivation and processing license, you're in the game, but you still cannot sell direct to consumers. Even the two Provinces that may allow private retailers, you won't be able to sell to the retailers. You can sell to the Provincial distributor, who will then sell to the retailers.
To sell direct to consumers in a retail shop (in the Provinces that allow it, currently only BC and AB):
Obtain a business license from your local Province like any other business, plus whatever license is available for independent Cannabis retailers in your province. Setup your shop and supply of product will depend on the province you're in. Currently only BC and AB are clear on this option. In BC for instance, you'll get a business license, then a Cannabis retailing license from Liquor Control and Licensing Branch. But you'll have to buy all of your product (flower, accessories) from the BC Liquor Distribution Branch as they will have a monopoly on distribution.
To sell direct to consumers at retail or online:
Obtain a Federal Sale License (Medical) - This allows phone or online sales to registered patients
Obtain a Federal Sale License (Non-Medical) - This allows phone or online sales to Adults
Obtain an Authorized Provincial and Territorial Sale License - This allows sales to Adults, however there is currently no information/policy from any provinces other than BC/AB on what you can sell and whether online sales are even an option. At this point only retail outlets are allowed/announced in these Provinces.
That's all I've deciphered at the moment. Not exactly an open market when the provinces essentially have a monopoly on distribution and even online sales to consumers (ON). Perhaps some laws/rules will change in the future but this is not something I'd sink any investment into until the market matures a bit, and maybe some of the laws are relaxed, particularly at the Provincial level.