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Toronto

Ontario's pot plan will not discourage the street sale of unsafe weed, critics warn

Weed activists took to the lawns of Queen's Park Saturday to protest what they're calling the province's "marijuana monopoly."

Business owners say they're planning ahead despite the province's crackdown on illegal dispensaries

Marijuana activists staged a protest in front of Queen's park Saturday to voice their dissatisfaction with the province's pot plan. (CBC)

Protesters took to the lawnsof Queen's ParkSaturday to highlight issues with whatthey're calling the province's "marijuana monopoly."

"It's unfair that the government that has persecuted us will charge high prices, tax us too high and control our industries," Mark Emery, Toronto's so-called "prince of pot" told CBC Toronto.

Emery, who says he has been arrested 30 times on cannabis-related charges,argues that the government is "taking the industry away from people who have cultivated it for 50 years."

Canada's 'prince of pot' says the government plan to legalize marijuana steals the industry from people who have cultivated it for half a century. (CBC)

The provinceannounced itsframework to manage the sale and use of marijuana in early September. The plan includes an online ordering service and roughly 150 stand-alone stores.

The governmentalso declared their intent to crack down on illegal pot shops in Ontario.

"If you operate one of these facilities, consider yourself on notice," Attorney General Yasir Naqvi said at a Sept. 6press conference.

But critics at the protest, including MPP Jack MacLaren,says the plan to open government-run stores next summer while cracking down on dispensaries undercuts the entire point of legalization.

Without competition,government-run cannabis stores will have no incentive to keep prices low and thus will not be able to discourage the streetsale of low quality, unregulated products that are unsafe, theCarleton-Mississippi Mills representative said in an interview.

Carleton-Mississippi Mills MPP Jack Maclaren says legalizing and regulating small businesses is the best way to eliminate the street sale of unsafe weed. (CBC)

"It's just a matter of how do we deliver to the consumer at a low price so that we are competitivewiththe street people." MacLarensaid.

He argues that licensing and regulating small businesses will be the best way to ensure safe, low-priced, high-quality weedin the province.

MacLaren says he's not opposed to the government being in the marketplace. Rather, he is just againstshutting out small business competition entirely.

Independent cannabisbusinesses however say they are forging ahead despite the warnings.

"We're preparing as if we were a regulated business because essentially we are, just not in a regulated framework,"Clinton Young, CEO of MMJ Canada said.

With files from Lauren Pelley