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MontrealQ&A

What to expect at Montreal's illegal marijuana shops

Jodie and Marc Emery opened eight shops in Montreal on Thursday, despite current federal law not allowing for the sale of recreational marijuana in Canada. On CBC Montreal's Daybreak, the activist couple explained their motivation and what to expect at the shops.

Marijuana legalization activists Jodie and Marc Emery offer details about their plans on Daybreak

Marc Emery, the self-described "Prince of Pot," and his wife Jodie plan to open 10 marijuana stores in Montreal. (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)

Jodieand Marc Emery have been pressing for the legalization of marijuana for years.

The activist couple hasa chain of shops inBritish Columbia and Ontario.

Now, they're opening storesinMontreal, despite current federal law not allowing for the sale of recreational marijuana in Canada.

The federal government is expected to table legislation legalizing cannabisin the spring.

They joined CBC Montreal'sDaybreak host Mike Finnertyon Thursday to explain their plans.

Read an edited excerpt of the interview below.

How do the stores work?

Jodie: It's a recreational model. We believe that all adults should have the right to access cannabis, which is a much safer choice than alcohol. We think the model out of Amsterdam has been around long enough that we should follow suit. In these locations you will show your ID in a front room and then you prove you're 19 or older and you enter the backroom where a selection of cannabis flowers are on display in jars with descriptions and prices and people are welcome to ask about it and choose the variety they like.

Jodie Emery, who owns the Cannabis Culture brand with her activist husband Marc Emery, left, talks to reporters on Thursday. (Paul Chiasson/Canadian Press)

What rules will you have?

Jodie: We just want people to be adults. For us, we don't want to discriminate against the healthy and the sick. Most dispensaries have tried to operate under a medical angle, with doctors and signing up as a member, but we feel it's not fair to make people get sick or lie about being sick in order to have access.

A woman smokes a joint at one of Montreal's new marijuana stores on Thursday. (Charles Contant/CBC)

Where do you get your supply?

Marc: Mostly people that have medical permits to grow for people for medical reasons but they grow more than they need to for that person, and so the excess goes to shops like ours.

Jodie: Some people have to hide. You have to remember that marijuana prohibition comes with very strict penalties. Many thousands have been growing for a very long time, but they have to hide. They would be very proud to put their name of face to their cannabis but the penalties are too harsh.

Marijuana buds were on display at the Mount Royal Avenue branch of Cannabis Culture. (Charles Contant/CBC)

Is the product safe?

Jodie: We do test for bacteria, for mould, for pesticides and all of the samples come back clear and clean. That (aGlobe and Mail report which found a high level of mould in one of their Toronto shops)was one example of one bud that was not the best.

A man tests out some of the offerings at the Mount Royal store. (Charles Contant/CBC)

Are you concerned about how close your shops are to neighbouring schools?

Marc: You have to be 19 to buy it. What you do after you buy it is not really my concern. My social responsibility is to make sure every adult has access to marijuana.

Jodie: We do not sell marijuana to children. But many young children are using marijuana oil to recover from seizures and from debilitating illnesses, and marijuana is far safer than sugar and fat, even peanuts and water, and laundry detergent pods, and many other dangerous substances.

Montrealers gather outside one of the new illegal marijuana stores on Thursday. (Charles Contant/CBC)

What happens if you're raided?

Marc: The employees will get arrested. They will be charged in all likelihood but not necessarily. We will provide lawyers to make sure they don't suffer or don't go to jail.

Jodie: Police should only enforce the law where harm is being done, but dispensaries and shops like ours do no harm. In fact, they help divert people away from alcohol and other pharmaceuticals.

Marc Emery holds a handful of cannabis at the opening of one of their stores on Thursday. (Paul Chiasson/Canadian Press)

Why not wait until the spring, when the federal government's plansare clearer?

Jodie: It's wrong to make people wait for justice. We've had decades of prohibition,Canadians criminalized and turned into second-class citizens.

Marc: Why should we wait another day? We've waited 50 years and endured this persecution for three generations.

Marc Emery celebrates the opening of one of his Cannabis Culture shops. (Paul Chiasson/Canadian Press)

Is this a question of principle or are you just making money?

Marc: Is it illegitimate to earn money? By the way, I have given away most of my money I have earned throughout my life.

Marc Emery inhales from a marijuana joint at one of his new shops in Montreal. (Charles Contant/CBC)