Pubdate: Tue, 25 Mar 2014 Source: Metro (Calgary, CN AB) Copyright: 2014 Metro Canada Contact: http://www.metronews.ca/Calgary Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4471 Author: Jeremy Nolais Page: 3 COMMERCIAL POT GROW REPS UNFAZED BY INJUNCTION Alberta entrepreneurs say their product will be higher quality New hope has blossomed for home marijuana growers after a federal judge's ruling, but Alberta entrepreneurs believe there will still be a budding commercial market for the drug regardless of the court's ultimate verdict. A group of medicinal marijuana patients were granted an injunction Friday that will allow them to continue growing plants in their abodes pending the outcome of a constitutional challenge of federal reforms set to take effect April 1. The law changes, being steered by Health Canada, would see all marijuana supply for licensed users turned over to commercial enterprises, like the ones Terry Booth and his peers with Releaf Inc. are busy setting up. Booth said in an interview Monday a 50,000-square-foot grow site north of Cremona is 50 per cent built and could be open for business as early as this summer. Booth conceded that if current home growers were ultimately granted permission to continue producing marijuana for themselves and fellow users - as they do now - it could cut into his customer pool. He maintained, however, the commercial market will be subject to far stricter quality testing. "Everyone has the right to be heard in this country - thank God," Booth said of the constitutional challenge. "I think a number of licensed producers that are available right now don't have the product or the number of strains available," he said. "But, in six months from now, when there are a number of producers up and running and a number of strains available, I think it will be better than growing your own." There are currently about 40,000 licensed marijuana users in Canada, up from 100 or less in 2001. Health Canada has projected that number could grow to 400,000 over time, a number that has lit the fire under some entrepreneurs to get into the marketplace early. Others, like Stan Swiatek with Sundial Growers, believes the quality of research into the effects of the drug will flourish in a system where organizations like his can readily produce a substantial supply. Swiatek hopes to run two commercial grows on plots of land west of Airdrie, but says he's run into opposition from some neighbours and officials with Rocky View County. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt