Canadian college to
launch marijuana cultivation course
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[October 05, 2016]
By Ethan Lou
TORONTO (Reuters) - A college in the
Atlantic Canadian province of New Brunswick plans to institute a program
on marijuana cultivation so that students can be trained to work at
local companies that produce the drug, a school official said on
Tuesday.
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The French-language College Communautaire du Nouveau-Brunswick will
launch the course sometime next year, said Michel Doucet, executive
director of continuing education and customized learning.
Canadian Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau campaigned last year
on a promise to legalize recreational marijuana and the government
has said it would introduce legislation by the spring of 2017.
Medical marijuana is already legal across Canada, and companies in
that relatively small sector have been eyeing the larger
recreational market with expansion in mind.
In August, the government of New Brunswick, where the college has
five campuses, said it invested C$4 million ($3.03 million) in a
medical marijuana company that will create up to 208 jobs in the
region.
Doucet said the school was still determining the exact details of
the program, including class size and the length and frequency at
which it will be conducted.
"This is not a mainstream program," he said. "We're looking at
training qualified employees to meet the needs of industry, versus
training students at large."
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Colleges in Canada differ from universities and grant mainly
diplomas instead of degrees. Doucet said the school had not yet
determined whether it would be a full diploma program.
New Brunswick, with a population of roughly 750,000, has suffered
from a weak economy, and westward migration has caused a brain drain
and shrinking population.
($1 = 1.3191 Canadian dollars)
(Reporting by Ethan Lou in Toronto; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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