Iqaluit to hold public hearing on cannabis store move

Higher Experience owners anticipate challenges similar to those faced when current location opened, co-owner says

Co-owners of the Higher Experience cannabis store in Iqaluit hope to move their business from its current location to this spot on Mattaaq Crescent. (Photo by Arty Sarkisian)

By Jorge Antunes

An Iqaluit cannabis store is one step closer to opening at a new location, after the city’s planning committee moved Tuesday to hold a public hearing on a rezoning request needed to allow it to set up shop.

Co-owners of the Higher Experience cannabis store on Fred Coman Street hope to move to a new location on Mattaaq Crescent, about 30 metres from the store’s current location, before their lease expires in August. But they need city council to rezone the new site to allow a cannabis store there.

This is the current location for the Higher Experience cannabis store in Iqaluit, on Fred Coman Street. (Photo by Arty Sarkisian)

Both the current store and the proposed new location are in the city’s core, Deputy Mayor and committee chairperson Kimberly Smith said during Tuesday’s discussion on a rezoning request.

A staff report recommended turning down the request because the new location is close to a school, playground and daycare.

Before the store opened in 2024 there were many concerns about its location in the city core and how close it would be to schools and other “sensitive” areas, Smith said.

“The sky has not fallen from a cannabis retailer being downtown,” she said.

“And, in fact, I think I’ve seen a significant decrease in the amount of illegal drug dealing … that was happening in front of Northmart.

“So I do think it is in the city’s best interest to keep this in the downtown core,” Smith said.

The store’s co-owner Frances Ikeno said Wednesday she expected the rezoning process to be “very similar to the way it was the first time.”

Ikeno said she appreciates that councillors “are very interested in what the public has to say.”

“Everything that they have concerns about regarding these ‘sensitive areas’ — we’ve been here for over a year now and none of it has come to fruition,” she said in a phone interview from Ottawa.

“The vast majority of these concerns are pretty much null,” she said, meaning many were addressed when the store opened in 2024.

For example, she said, the foyer of the current store has an electric door and camera so that customers have to be buzzed in to enter. No one underage gets past the door, she said. The minimum age to buy cannabis in Nunavut is 19.

Adults casually entering with their children are asked to leave immediately, Ikeno added.

She said this will be her second time going through a public hearing, so she’s very familiar with the process and looks forward to it.

The planning and development committee voted Tuesday to move forward with a public hearing and to re-examine conditions related to the proximity of “sensitive uses.”

There was no decision made about when the public hearing will be held.

The Government of Nunavut announced Wednesday afternoon that it has opened a community consultation related to the cannabis store’s relocation.

Under Nunavut’s Cannabis Act, the territorial government must consult the community whenever an application to open a store is received.

The 30-day consultation period will run until March 17, a statement from the GN’s finance department said.

Nunavummiut can submit comments or concerns by emailing cannabis@gov.nu.ca or by calling 867-975-5875.

Ikeno said she hopes the hearing process will prove “the public wants the store there, that they back our small business, and that we’re able to move ahead with things.”

Committee members Amber Aglukark, Solomon Awa, Harry Flaherty and Samuel Tilley voted in favour of holding a public hearing, while Methusalah Kunuk and Simon Nattaq opposed it. Romeyn Stevenson and Kyle Sheppard were absent.

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(5) Comments:

  1. Posted by CB on

    I think this is a waste of time. The store owners want to move across the street. Let them. Get on with it. Otherwise it seems like someone on city council has an axe to grind with the store owners.

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    • Posted by It is required on

      The Public Hearing is required under the Planning Act. If you want the project to be approved then show up to the hearing and express your concerns.

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  2. Posted by Derek on

    It’s sad when was somebody on the town council? It’s against a little shop that just wants to move a 100 feet across the road, not causing any problems. 0 problems outside of his store.
    No one hanging out in front of this store.
    Cannabis is not the problem in this town. Why don’t you look at the alcohol problems in town? Where it seems like everybody is drunk. Everywhere, walking in front of traffic, causing fights.
    Statistically, if you look at how resources of the town get wasted on the drunks. Because of the fights, ambulances need to be called the police need to get involved. So the town is throwing their money away in that aspect. But the cannabis use what calls do they get for that?
    Then, look at those people that own many buildings and wanna bully the small independent shops. If everybody wants equality, start acting that way

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    • Posted by Normand Marineau on

      Committee members Amber Aglukark, Solomon Awa, Harry Flaherty and Samuel Tilley voted in favour of holding a public hearing, while Methusalah Kunuk and Simon Nattaq opposed it.

      Old school and out of touch to the new real world are against this. Might want to read before commenting. Sounds more of a procedural thing then just accepting this owner to move across the street.

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  3. Posted by Mitch on

    There is drinking going on everywhere and it is more visible in the community than marijuana use

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