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B.C. may allow licensed cannabis retailers to accept online payments, deliver

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What happened: B.C. may change its Cannabis Control and Licensing Act  to allow legal private cannabis retailers to conduct e-commerce sales, Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General Mike Farnworth told Business in Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­in an exclusive interview.

Why this matters: The change would put legal cannabis retailers on a level playing field with the provincial government’s BC Cannabis Stores website as well as black-market operators that illegally sell cannabis online.

B.C. Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General Mike Farnworth told Glacier Media that he is open to allowing all licensed cannabis retailers to sell online.

“We’re certainly looking at it,” he said. “One of the things that I want us to do is to be innovative and be able to operate in a way that supports the industry and reflects what consumers would like as well.”

B.C. government  started to allow legal private retailers to accept online orders as long as the buyer picked up the merchandise, and paid for the purchase at the licensed bricks-and-mortar store.

Ontario went a step further on April 7 when it for the first time allowed private cannabis retailers to conduct e-commerce payments, delivery and curbside pick-up sales. This was days after the Ontario government ordered all cannabis stores to close because they were non-essential services. Ontario has since allowed cannabis stores to reopen its physical stores.

B.C. cannabis retailers who have operations in Ontario applaud Farnworth’s willingness to update B.C.’s retail regulations.

Choom CEO Corey Gillom, whose company is based in Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­and has one B.C. store on West 2nd Avenue, said his Niagara Falls store quickly launched an e-commerce website and it now counts for about 50 per cent of his sales.

Hobo Cannabis Co. owner Jeff Donnelly, who has four stores in Ontario, told Glacier Media that 30 per cent of his Ontario sales are now via e-commerce and for delivery.

“The BC Cannabis Stores just can’t support the [demand for e-commerce,]” said Donnelly, whose B.C. stores include one in  Kelowna and Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­stores on Robson Street, Granville Street, Main Street and West 4th Avenue.

“It takes two days to get cannabis. That’s not keeping with consumer trends in this business. You order something and expect it to come two days later?”

Donnelly has long wanted the ability to sell online and he said that he believes that the sales would help government coffers.

Provinces are in charge of regulations around the retail sale of cannabis. The federal government put in place a 10 per cent federal excise tax. Money raised from that 10 per cent excise tax is split, with the federal government taking 25 per cent and the remaining 75 per cent going to the provinces, based on where the sales took place.

Donnelly also would like to have the government lift its eight-store cap on the number of stores that any single ownership group can have in a cannabis-store chain. BIV asked Farnworth about whether that cap could be lifted and he said that the plan is to review that policy next year.

Legal cannabis sales in B.C. hit a monthly record of more than $23.5 million in March – more than eight times as much money spent as in March 2019, according to Statistics Canada.

Sales had also been trending up, given that February’s more than $21 million in cannabis sales in B.C. was also a monthly record.

The spending surge can be attributed to more legal stores open, fewer black market stores in operation, improved product quality and better established supply chains for newly legal products such as edibles and drinks.

There was also panic buying in the early days of the pandemic, and a continued trend of customers spending more money per transaction.

“People are stocking up for longer so they don’t have to come back as often,” said Wildflower Brands’ chief development officer Krystian Wetulani, who also oversees the City Cannabis Co. chain.

“Our average ticket [or transaction value] is definitely a bit higher.”

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