Montreal

Want to sell cannabis? Quebec launches hiring drive for government-run stores

Quebec's government-run cannabis monopoly has launched a hiring drive with jobs starting at $14 per hour, but it cannot yet confirm Montreal will be among the cities getting the first wave of pot stores.

Jobs available at $14 per hour at coming cannabis stores

Quebec is seeking workers for the provincially owned corporation that will control and sell cannabis. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

Quebec's government-run cannabis monopoly has launched a hiring drive with jobs starting at $14 per hour, but it cannot yet confirm Montreal will be among the cities getting the first wave of pot stores.

Candidates without criminal records are being invited to apply on the website of the corporation, which is an independently run subsidiary of the SAQ, the Quebec's liquor board.

Quebec is looking to open about 20 stores by mid-October, when federal legislation legalizing cannabis enters into force.

The cannabis corporation has signed leases for stores in Levis, Trois-Rivières, Drummondville and Quebec City, it announced on Thursday.

Quebec's cannabis law stipulates pot stores must be a certain distance from schools and daycares, and with Montreal's dense neighbourhoods, finding the right location has proven more difficult than in other cities, said spokesman Mathieu Gaudreault.

"Right now we can't confirm Montreal will be in the first wave of stores,'' he said an interview Friday. "We want to open stores quickly and we are putting in all the effort to open stores across Quebec, including in Montreal.''

He said Quebecers living anywhere in the province will be able to order marijuana online through the corporation's platform on the first day cannabis becomes legal, on Oct. 17.

20 stores by October

The roughly 20 stores that are scheduled to open for October will be open 12 hours a day, from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., seven days a week.

"The goal of these stores is to bring people from the illegal market into the legal one,'' Gaudreault said. "That means the product needs to be available.''

Sales clerks will begin at $14 per hour, and they will be eligible for health and other benefits.

The starting wage for unionized employees at Quebec's state-run liquor stores, in comparison, is $19.33 an hour.

Prospective employees will be required to pass a test following their training in order to be hired.

Gaudreault said salaries for directors and deputy directors will be competitive but didn't give details.