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Manitoba

Communities that didn't put cannabis question to voters are open for business, sort of

Manitoba municipalities that haven't held a plebiscite will effectively be open to cannabis business on Oct. 17. This includes at least two municipalities Hanover and Minto-Odanah where councils voted against permitting retail sales but must allow pot shops because they are not holding referendums like eight other communities.

8 communities, including Winkler and Steinbach, letting voters decide whether they want retail pot

Prohibiting the sale of retail pot can only be done through a referendum, provincial rules say. (Robert F. Bukaty/Associated Press)

Manitoba municipalities that haven't held aplebiscite will effectively be open to cannabis business on Oct. 17.

Thatincludes at least two municipalities Hanover and Minto-Odanah where councilsvoted against permitting retail sales but must, perhaps begrudgingly, allow pot shops because they are not holding referendums like eight other communities in Manitoba.

But leaders in the two communities don't think aretailer would even bother.

"If we take theprovincial guidelines, your setbacks from schools and parks, all that kind of stuff, there's one community large enough that in one corner you can shoehorn in a store," rural municipality of Hanover Reeve Stan Toews said, referring to the northwest corner ofGrunthal,southeast of Winnipeg, as the only location that's just right.

After they realized their vote prohibiting pot was meaningless,Hanovercouncil simplydidn'thave the appetite for a referendum, Toews said.

The only wayto prohibit the sale of recreational pot in Manitoba, as they discovered, is with a plebiscite. Eight communitieswill ask residents to have a say on Oct. 24, when voters were already scheduled togo to the polls for municipal elections: Winkler, Steinbach, Lac du Bonnet, Snow Lake and the municipalities of Stanley, Stuartburn, Riding Mountain West and Wallace-Woodworth.

Limits on store locations

For the rest, it won't exactly bea free-for-allonce recreational cannabis is legalized, said Kristianne Dechant, manager of communications and research at the Liquor, Gaming and Cannabis Authority of Manitoba.

"Without a plebiscite, you're effectively saying that retail cannabis stores could open within the municipality, but not necessarily everywhere and anywhere," she said. "The municipality still has bylaw and zoning processes, and so they are still able to limit them in certain areas and certain zones."

Dechantsaid the LGCA will respect the results of any referendum.

James Andersen, reeve of the RM of Minto-Odanah, said councillors didn't think there was any point in changing their position or holding a plebiscite,especiallybecause Minnedosa, atown of 2,500 people that has its own bylaws, isin the middle of the RM.

"Noone's going to be coming way out to a rural area to buy cannabis," he said, "so we just left it alone."

The need for a referendum is part of the province's retail cannabisbill, whichpassed last summer.

Eight municipalities chose to hold pot plebiscites at the same time as voters elect councillors, for many a matter of convenience and cost savings, given that people arevoting anyway. Municipalities can still pose a pot plebiscite any time before 2022, the law says,but after that, the referendum question can only be raised during municipal elections.

So far, there are no referendums scheduled after election day.

Winkler Mayor Martin Harder expects the "yes" and "no" votes to be in the 50 per cent range when his city considers retailing reefer. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

Winkler Mayor Martin Harder is predicting a tight vote, separated by no more than 10 percentage points, in his southern Manitoba city of 14,000 people.

"The choice of the people is what we're willing to live with."

Harder said Winkler council decided to hold a referendum before he got an expected petition from a ratepayer.

"Why would we force somebody to spend a month getting signatures? And, for that matter, we were thinking we had better things to do than just simply debating the plebiscite or debating the retail cannabis location."

Winkler isn't the same placeit once was, Harder said. Thousands of new arrivals, many immigrants, have effectively doubled the populationin two decadesand transformed the makeup of the traditionally conservative community.

Prohibition history

The city also banned liquor sales for decades, but no longer.

"Therewasn't a licensed restaurant around, and now there's almost every other [restaurant], including the bowling alley, that's licensed, including some city facilities like the concert hall," Harder said. "With cannabis, who knows?"

Harder has spoken with two retailers who want toset up shop first if the community approves pot shops.

Any bans would not apply to people's ability to buy recreationalcannabis from other communities or online, nor consumingit in theirhomes or backyards.

Outside the city, the RM of Stanley is also planning areferendum.

More opinions sought

"The only reason we did it is we're sitting there, we're seven guys, and it was felt around the council table that maybe we should get a bigger audience for this," said Reeve Morris Olafson, who acknowledged it was unlikely a pot shop would establish rootsin his municipality.

That sentiment is felt in other communitiesholding referendums, including Riding Mountain West.

"Council really felt that because we really have nobig urban centres in our municipality, that the sale of it was really not going to matter," said Reeve BarryChescu of the western Manitoba municipality, which has only onestore of any kind, in Inglis.

"If cannabis sales were going to happen, it's going to happen in Russell," he said, referring to the biggest community around.

KimStephen, mayor of Snow Lake, is expecting a "yes" vote in her northern Manitoba town of 950 people.

She's not sure if it even matters.

"Our Main Street is 400 feet long andour school's at one end of it, and our businesses run up along it," she said."Ifthey say it has to be sold in a business area, do we qualify?"

Municipalities have the authority to determine where retail cannabis stores areestablished, and their distancefrom facilities such as schools and community centres.

Other communities that either rejected the idea of retail cannabis or refrained from answering when the Association of Manitoba Municipalities polled its membership last year have since decided to allow pot shops, including Beausejour, Virden and the municipality of Rhineland, the latter bordering the municipality of Stanley where a referendum will be held.

The provincial government previously said they want90 per cent ofManitobansto haveaccess to legal cannabis within a 30-minute drive or less. The province hopes to achieve that goal within two years of legalization.