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Village Farms International Inc VFF

Village Farms International, Inc. is a vertically integrated supplier of plant-based consumer packaged goods in the cannabis and cannabidiol (CBD) categories in North America and selected markets internationally. The Company’s segments include Produce, Cannabis Canada, Cannabis United States and Energy. The Produce segment produces, markets, and sells quality tomatoes, bell peppers and cucumbers. The Cannabis Canada segment produces and supplies cannabis products to be sold to other licensed providers and provincial governments across Canada and internationally. The Cannabis United States segment develops and sells CBD-based health and wellness products, including ingestible, edible and topical applications. The Energy segment produces power that it sells per a long-term contract to its customers. Its subsidiaries include Village Farms Canada LP, Village Farms LP, Pure Sunfarms Corp, Balanced Health Botanicals, LLC, and Rose LifeScience Inc.


NDAQ:VFF - Post by User

Post by Alex2018on May 07, 2018 7:18am
101 Views
Post# 27990116

What do you think about this? Can they realy stop it?

What do you think about this? Can they realy stop it?Globe editorial: The Senate should stand down on cannabis PUBLISHED 2 HOURS AGOUPDATED MAY 4, 2018 Conservative senators have been threatening to slow or even kill the Liberal governments cannabis legalization bill for months. But with a third reading in the upper house approaching, and a Senate committee having just recommended a years delay in implementing the law, things are getting serious. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is standing his ground. He insists marijuana will be legal by summer, as planned. Hes right to do so. The Senates latest concerns are not enough to justify delaying for 12 months a repeal of criminal sanctions that put blameless people behind bars, and which Canadians effectively voted to scrap in the last election. STORY CONTINUES BELOW ADVERTISEMENT Earlier in this confrontation between Mr. Trudeau and the newly emboldened Red Chamber he helped create, there were worries that Tory senators would try to rag the puck on the bill until a prospective Conservative government could kill it. The latest Senate criticisms of the bill at least have the merit of being more serious. Lillian Dyck, chair of the Senates Aboriginal Peoples committee and a Liberal senator, suggests a delay is necessary in part to develop culturally sensitive materials warning Indigenous people about the dangers of pot. Its not a trivial idea. Drug abuse in some Indigenous communities is a scourge. More broadly, her charge that the government consulted inadequately with Indigenous leaders is troubling. But none of this is a deal-breaker. Marijuana is not a new drug people who care one way or another know about its appeal and its risks. And its not too late for Ottawa to start talking with Indigenous leaders and to keep doing so, as they will no doubt also do with provinces and municipalities. Other concerns about small personal grow-ops hurting home prices or increasing property crime should not be pretexts for delay either. Most importantly, these Senates proposed delay could drag on beyond the next federal election, once the dust has settled. If the Conservatives form government in 2019, they will likely kibosh legalization. In that case, the unelected Senate will have blocked an important Liberal election promise. They should not even flirt with doing so.
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