Pubdate: Wed, 04 Oct 2006 Source: Reminder, The (CN MB) Copyright: 2006 Reminder Online Contact: http://www.ffdailyreminder.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3827 Author: Jonathon Naylor, Staff Writer OUTPUT TO INCREASE AS POT DEAL EXTENDED Health Canada has awarded Flin Flon's famous grow-op a one-year extension that calls for a significant jump in medicinal marijuana output. The $2.1-million deal requires contractor Prairie Plant Systems to supply 1,712 lbs of pot throughout the year, up 85 per cent from the previous annual total. Brent Zettl, Prairie's president and CEO, said his Saskatoon-based company will spend nearly $500,000 in upgrades to accommodate the increased production. "We're going to maximize what we have," said Zettl, noting that most of the money will be spent on capital infrastructure and efficiency enhancements. More marijuana will also mean more jobs at the company's growth chamber, based in an abandoned Trout Lake mine outside city limits. But Zettl isn't yet sure how many new employees will be added to the nine Flin Flonners currently on the payroll. The increased production is necessary as more terminally ill Canadians receive authorization to use the government-grade weed as medicine. As of Sept. 1, 1,492 Canadians were authorized to possess marijuana for medical purposes. Of those, 301 were receiving dry marijuana grown in the subterranean chamber -- more than double the 124 from two years ago. A University of Montreal study on marijuana's possible benefits for chronic pain sufferers is also upping the demand, Zettl said. Many patients with diseases such as AIDS, cancer, and multiple sclerosis say that smoking marijuana helps alleviate their symptoms. The contract extension was signed last Friday, one day before a previous extension expired. The prior extension had been put in place while Health Canada readied a new long-term deal for tender. That tender has yet to be put out. Prairie Plant Systems was awarded the initial five-year, $5.5-million contract to supply the product in 2000. A decade earlier, the company had established its first state-of-the-art underground growth chamber in Flin Flon. Since then, the local operations have been used to study over 500 plant species, including culinary herbs and agricultural crops, according to Prairie's website. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine