Cannabis store could replace ByWard Market restaurant - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 10:13 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Cannabis store could replace ByWard Market restaurant

Alberta-based cannabis retailer Fire & Flower has reached a deal with a pot shop lottery winner to open two eastern Ontario storefronts, one of them on York Street in Ottawa's Byward Market.

Councillor says retailer's proposed York Street location 'a good fit'

A painter touches up a sign at a Fire & Flower cannabis retail outlet in north Edmonton that opened Oct. 17. The company has now partnered with licence-holders for two storefronts in eastern Ontario. (Terry Reith/CBC)

The CEO of an Alberta-based chain of cannabis stores says his company is looking forward to setting up shop in Ottawa's ByWard market.

Fire & Flower CEO Trevor Fencott says thenew location at 129 York St. the former Smoque Shack restaurant near Dalhousie Street would beidealbecause the area draws foot traffic and serves as a retail hub.

"We really feel strongly that Ottawa is going to be a key part of what Canadians look at when they see the regulated system," he said. "This is going to be where a lot of people get their first experience."

A 15-day period of public comments on the proposed storefront locations is now open through the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO).

But with much of the consultation legwork already done by city council, Fencott said he'd be "very surprised" to get pushback from people livingin the area.

Councillor support

The citycouncillorforRideau-Vanier,MathieuFleury, said the proximity to hotels and transit makes the location work.

"I don't mind the location," he said, adding that he would be watching to see that a clusterof similar shops didn't open in the same neighbourhood.

"I think it's important that the product be accessible," he said.

"The entire goal of the federal government is to remove weed from thehands of gangs."

Fencottis hoping the pull of the cannabis industry will slide into the roster of attractions that already bring crowds to the nation's capital.

"We've got things like Beavertails, we've got things likepoutineand now we've got things like cannabis," he said.

"It's very natural, I think."

Fire and Flower CEO Trevor Fencott stands inside a store on Edmonton's Whyte Avenue in 2018. (Terry Reith/CBC)

The company which has numerous cannabis retail locations in Alberta and Saskatchewan reached a deal with two Ontario pot-shop lottery winners to open stores in the eastern part of the province, with thesecond at 75 Brock St. in downtown Kingston.

The partnership will see the licencees undertaking the day-to-day running of the business, with Fire & Flower providing the organizational heft and institutional knowledge of an established cannabis company.

This is not selling chocolate bars or T-shirts, this is selling a regulated substance, so you really have to know what you're doing.- Trevor Fencott

Actually opening the store is the easy part, Fencott said, but there's a steep learning curve when it comes to navigating the tricky regulations surrounding legalized cannabis a key reason why licence-holders are teaming up with more established companies.

"This is not selling chocolate bars or T-shirts, this is selling a regulated substance, so you really have to know what you're doing," he said.

"This is the beginning of the industry and it's important that it's done right."

Fencottsaid the company has suggested modelling the York Street location after another location in Edmonton, where Fire & Flower turned the second floor of the building into an industrial kitchen to show people how to cook with cannabis.

4 of 5 locations known

Ontario announced the results of its lottery to hand out the first licenses to operate cannabis stores last month.

After initially planning a broader roll out, the government announced last month it would only allow 25 stores to open as of April 1 because of concerns it had about the supply.

The six qualifying communities for this roundin what the province has deemed eastern OntarioOttawa, Kingston, Belleville, Peterborough, Kawartha Lakes and Barrieget five of those licenses.

These two proposals, along with one on Wellington Street West in Ottawa and another three blocks away from Fire & Flower's Kingston space, mean just one of these proposals has not been put out for public consultation.

With files from Leah Hansen