Pubdate: Mon, 26 Feb 2018 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2018 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.torontosun.com/letter-to-editor Website: http://torontosun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Jane Stevenson Page: 8 STUDYING WEED 101 Pot courses sprouting at Ontario colleges Puff, puff, pass will take on a new meaning when recreational cannabis becomes legal in Canada later this year. And not just in the way you might think. Some Canadian colleges and universities are preparing people for the thousands of potential new jobs expected to be created as the country's booming weed industry - valued at $23 billion by accounting firm Deloitte - transitions from the black market to a legal one with an estimated 5 million existing customers across the country. "The growth will be exponential," said Debbie Johnston, dean of the school of continuing education at Durham College in Oshawa. "It's just like when prohibition was ended. This is an utterly unique opportunity in the market. These don't come along very often." As of last November, Durham College started offering a monthly weekend course (moving to twice monthly in April due to demand) called Medical Cannabis Fundamentals for Business Professionals, that can accommodate 30 students in the classroom and 30 remotely. (Cost: $399.95 plus tax for two seven-hour days.) "It gives them a background in the cannabis industry," said Johnston. "We had an unbelievable range of people take the course. Everything from business people, investors, lots of health-care providers, holistic practitioners. We had a pharmacist from the U.S. We got a farmer. We got a chef. Every course has been totally booked. And we anticipate that's going to continue because there's a huge interest and there are lots of job opportunities out there." In addition to growing and selling marijuana, hemp and seeds, (Ontario plans to open 150 government-run pot shops), there will be grass-related work in government, accounting, law, PR, packaging, transportation, security and tourism. Niagara College, meanwhile, at its Niagara-on-the-like campus is offering a year-long, two-semester Commercial Cannabis Production course this fall for the first time at a cost of $5,000 per semester (and eligible for the Ontario Students Assistance Program or OSAP). The first class will hold 24 students with an undergrad degree or diploma, but demand is such that there will likely be additional classes accomodating 24 more students in each of the winter and spring semesters. "We've got substantial interest in the program," said Alan Unwin, associate dean for the school of environmental and horticultural studies at Niagara College. "Last time I checked, we were closing in on 300 applicants for 24 openings, with students understanding there's a real possible career opportunity. The program was approved by the ministry of advanced education and development over the summer, so in that regard it is the first academic program to receive that credential and that recognition in Canada. We were the first. I don't think we'll be the last." The Niagara College course is geared toward its graduates working "within a licensed production facility in more senior level positions with a substantial focus of the curriculum on cultivation of the crop and then as well understanding the legal framework," said Unwin. "We are hearing already from those licensed producers (of medicinal marijuana) that they're really struggling to find highly trained, well-skilled individuals to work in their facilities. That obviously will reasonably grow when recreational rules come into play." One of Canada's leading cannabis activists, Jodie Emery, who divides her time between Toronto and Vancouver with husband Marc, applauds the emergence of post-secondary courses in Canada to help people find jobs in the nascent pot industry. "These (colleges) and universities that are offering courses, they're getting ahead of the trend," said Jodie Emery. "They're doing what (Wayne) Gretzky said, they're going where the puck is going. You know that in the future that (pot) is going to be around. But it's still bold to do that because there's a lot of opposition to pot still." Emery also supports those working in the existing black market keeping their jobs once recreational pot becomes legal. "There's this strange purgatory where everyone who's been involved in pot until now has been doing it illegally," said Emery. "If the (government) prohibits people with criminal records, those people already in the industry will still remain in the industry, they're just going to be criminalized. And so we're losing their expertise, we're losing their ability to help the market grow, and excluding them prevents us from taxing and regulating their jobs like anyone else should be." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt