Saturday, July 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Medical Marijuana Producers Eye Changes For Advertising Regulations

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Jan, 2016 12:54 PM
    OTTAWA — Some of Canada's biggest producers of medical marijuana want Ottawa to implement advertising regulations similar to those that govern the sale of alcohol, as they await the Liberal government's long-promised legal recreational market.
     
    A concerted policy push is underway from Tweed Inc., Mettrum Ltd. and Bedrocan Canada Inc. — three licensed producers that operate under Health Canada's medical marijuana program.
     
    Bedrocan and Tweed are subsidiaries of Canopy Growth Corp., a combined company that was formed in a merger.
     
    The group wants the government to move quickly to create and implement legislation for a future recreational market in order to avoid a "Wild West" scenario.
     
    The companies have also been working with lobbyists from Ensight Canada to push their message to government and in the media as the Liberal government prepares to move forward on its promise to regulate and legalize recreational use.
     
    The government's first step in that process will be to establish a provincial, territorial and federal task force to hear from public health, substance abuse and public safety experts.
     
    Health Minister Jane Philpott has indicated the panel will be established soon, but so far the timeline remains unclear.
     
    The government has also placed Toronto MP and former police chief Bill Blair, the parliamentary secretary to Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould, in a leading role as it prepares to move forward on the file.
     
    Advertising regulations should be a central part of the dialogue once it is underway, said Tweed Inc. president Mark Zekulin.
     
     
    "The system that we are operating in right now is set up for a controlled substance," Zekulin said.
     
    Licensed medicinal marijuana producers are currently allowed to publish only basic information about their products, such as name and price, according to Health Canada. Active promotion of the product is prohibited.
     
    The regulations pose a legal conundrum for companies like Tweed that are, not surprisingly, anxious to market and promote their products, and yet remain hampered by the strict marketing rules.
     
    Zekulin, who has a background in international law, said changing the rules would benefit consumer choice about the different strains available.
     
    "There is a difference between A and B, and people are going to want to understand what that difference is," he said.
     
    "There is actually a need to give people information so they can make an informed decision about whether the product is the one that they want."
     
     
    Some public health experts are concerned about cannabis being advertised in the same way as alcohol.
     
    Mark Haden, an adjunct professor at the University of British Columbia, said changes to marijuana regulation will require a detailed analysis rooted in the experience Canada has already had with tobacco and alcohol.
     
    Product promotion is a significant driver of consumption and related harms, a lesson Canada and other countries have learned all too well, Haden said.
     
    All branding and promotion of cannabis products should be prohibited and plain packaging should be required, he added, while unintended consequences and potential harms of a new regime should be monitored closely.
     
    Haden also said he wants to see the Liberal government take a public health approach as it moves forward with legalization, instead of a commercial approach.
     
     
    "They need to choose a framework," he said. "They need to stand in one of those two camps, because they are very different camps."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Lawsuit Launched Over Fire On Historic Street In New Westminster

    Lawsuit Launched Over Fire On Historic Street In New Westminster
    The Oct. 10, 2013 fire on Columbia Street destroyed or damaged several buildings and businesses including the E.L. Lewis building — which belonged to one family for more than a century.

    Lawsuit Launched Over Fire On Historic Street In New Westminster

    Alberta Minister David Eggen Hires Third Party In Transgender Controversy At Edmonton School

    Alberta Minister David Eggen Hires Third Party In Transgender Controversy At Edmonton School
    David Eggen says in a statement that the group National Growth Partners will report back and provide recommendations starting in three months

    Alberta Minister David Eggen Hires Third Party In Transgender Controversy At Edmonton School

    Separate, Random Hammer Attacks In Quebec Leave One Dead, Three Injured

    Separate, Random Hammer Attacks In Quebec Leave One Dead, Three Injured
    A 19-year-old man was killed and two other people suffered head injuries following random attacks on Tuesday evening in Laval, just north of Montreal.

    Separate, Random Hammer Attacks In Quebec Leave One Dead, Three Injured

    Guy Turcotte's Mother Testifies About Rambling Conversation She Had With Her Son

    Guy Turcotte's Mother Testifies About Rambling Conversation She Had With Her Son
    Marguerite Fournier described the call she had with Turcotte on Feb. 20, 2009, the day his two children, Olivier and Anne-Sophie, were killed.

    Guy Turcotte's Mother Testifies About Rambling Conversation She Had With Her Son

    Quebec Judge Signs Off On $450-million Settlement Fund For Lac-Megantic Victims

    Quebec Judge Signs Off On $450-million Settlement Fund For Lac-Megantic Victims
    The roughly 25 companies that have agreed to contribute to the $450 million will begin releasing the money within three weeks, Benoit said.

    Quebec Judge Signs Off On $450-million Settlement Fund For Lac-Megantic Victims

    Some Details About Family In Sex Abuse Case Can Be Shared: Privacy Watchdog

    Information and Privacy Commissioner Elizabeth Denham makes the ruling in a complaint filed by a mother identified only as J.P.

    Some Details About Family In Sex Abuse Case Can Be Shared: Privacy Watchdog