First Nation wants to become ‘Tim Hortons of Cannabis’

InFocus
Opaskwayak Cree Nation in northern Manitoba has made a major investment in cannabis and Chief Christian Sinclair says it is already paying off. The community invested $3 million in National Access Cannabis. The company was recently one of the successful candidates Manitoba selected to run dispensaries in the province.

“When we made the investment, we didn’t look at it as a local enterprise. What we did is make the investment, so we can be participating as the majority shareholder, largest private shareholder on the operations right across Canada where jurisdictions allow.” Sinclair says “so this is going to be as we say the Tim Hortons of Cannabis, if you will, is what we are actually pursuing. With the initial investment we’ve made has already returned us over four hundred percent, so we’ve almost paid off our initial investment already.”

We put the pending legalization of recreational cannabis InFocus with Sinclair, Indigenous Roots Vice President Michael Fontaine, Mohawk cannabis and sovereignty advocate, Clifton Nicolas and APTN Investigates reporter Melissa Ridgen, whose documentary “Legal Weed” debuts on March 23.

Nicholas feels First Nations should be able to grow cannabis without the involvement of the federal and provincial governments. “I think the market will open itself to craft growers, almost like you have microbreweries and beers, and small-scale wineries because a cannabis user is not a user that wants to use Budweiser when they can smoke Dom Perignon.”


Contribute Button  

2 thoughts on “First Nation wants to become ‘Tim Hortons of Cannabis’

  1. Orest D Serwylo says:

    Awesome interview … great job guys!

Comments are closed.