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Project News Cuttings
Although the forests ministry has already decided it won't put in a bid, and Ringdal is dubious, nearly 200 individuals and corporations from across Canada sought information on becoming Canada's official marijuana source.  Health Canada announced in early May that it was planning to award a five-year, multi-million-dollar contract for a Canadian supplier of the drug.  Bids are to be in by June 6.  The contract called for the production of 100,000 cigarettes and 85 kilograms of marijuana in the first year.  The weed has to be cultivated, dried, prepared and delivered to the government.  The value of the contract has been estimated at about $5 million.  The marijuana will be used for clinical research trials to gather scientific evidence on whether it's safe and effective for patients to smoke marijuana for medicinal purposes.  Ringdal, who is using his number at B.C.  Lions as a contact number for the application, said he asked for the information because he wanted to find out what was involved in the project.  He stressed that his interest is personal and does not involve the football club in any way.  Ringdal said he has a partner who is licensed to grow industrial hemp, so he already has an interest in the hemp business.  "It's a related business and I wanted to find out what was involved in this application," he said.  As for the smoking kind of marijuana, he said that judging from the few puffs he took back in 1968, he doesn't even like the smell of it.  He said the application process is very complicated, and the project may prove not to be viable.  "I don't know if we will ever get to the point where we can make an application." The 65-page information package says bidders must be able to show they have the financial capability, the ability to provide a secure environment for the project and the proper resources.  The government is interested in growing the marijuana only in a greenhouse.  Masset sees the tender call as an opportunity to diversify the economy of the small, isolated community, said Clinton Mutch, the town's economic development coordinator .  Even if the contract means only 20 new jobs, it would be significant for the town's 1,400 residents, he said.  Mutch said the town has been under a lot of economic pressure with the Canadian military's withdrawal of a base in the region, along with the slowdown of the local fishing and logging industries.  The timing for the application was convenient for the town because it was already planning to build a greenhouse to grow fresh vegetables for the island, Mutch said.  "Even if in five years we lose the contract to another bidder, we are still left with the greenhouse, which would be fully paid for." He said the town is still working on the application and trying to secure partners for the project, adding he's not sure if it will be able to meet the June 6 deadline.  Even though the B.C.  forests ministry felt the project was important enough to look at, it has since decided it does not make business sense, said Eric Kristianson, the ministry's manager of media relations.  He said the project requires eight hectares (20 acres) of greenhouse space, which the ministry does not have.  The ministry had Surrey Nurseries look into the viability of the project, but nursery manager Anthony Willington said there were "too many pitfalls and speed bumps in the project." He added, "I was a little surprised we looked at it as closely as we did." After about a week of analysis, the project was killed at a policy level on Monday. 

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