Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Marijuana Companies Search For Workers Ahead Of Legalization

The Canadian Press, 15 Jan, 2018 12:16 PM
    VANCOUVER — Canadian marijuana companies are on a hiring spree, looking to fill an array of roles as they gear up for the legalization of recreational cannabis later this year.
     
     
    The workforce is booming, said Alison McMahon, who runs Cannabis At Work, a staffing agency focused on the burgeoning industry.
     
     
    Right now, she's recruiting for positions in everything from growing and production to sales and marketing, all across the country.
     
     
    Stigma may once have kept people from applying for work with a cannabis company, but those perceptions have shifted and people are now excited about the opportunities, McMahon said.
     
     
    "I think that the people, at this point, who are looking at the industry and are excited really see the upside and the growth potential," she said. "More and more people are open to this topic, so it doesn't end up being that big of a deal."
     
     
    The buzz around Canadian pot is allowing companies to be picky and choose top talent, said Kerri-Lynn McAllister, chief marketing officer at Lift, a company that puts on cannabis events and runs a website sharing marijuana news and reviews.
     
     
     
     
    "Because of all the excitement, it's really an opportunity for companies to pick up the A-players in business or whatever field they're operating in," said McAllister, speaking from first-hand experience. She recently left a job in the financial tech sector to join Lift.
     
     
    The industry has come out from the shadows recently, McAllister said, and that's allowing companies to attract business executives, tech wizards and marketing masters who are at the top of their game.
     
     
    Dozens of prospective employees came to meet McMahon and her staff at the Lift Cannabis Expo in Vancouver on Saturday, resumes in hand. 
     
     
    Chad Grant said he's been working in construction, but wants to get a job growing marijuana.
     
     
    "It's going to be a big industry, so I'd like to be on the ground floor type thing," he said.
     
     
    Working with marijuana is nothing new for some of the applicants.
     
     
    Grady Jay said he's been growing for the underground industry for years. Now he wants to transition to working for the legal market.
     
     
    "I basically want to wake up and do what I love in the morning," Jay said.
     
     
    Experience is part of what marijuana companies are looking for, particularly when it comes to production, McMahon said, noting that experience could come from working in a commercial greenhouse or the black market.
     
     
    Successful applicants can expect to make salaries comparable to what similar industries offer, McMahon said. A general growing position would probably make about $50,000 per year, she said, while a director of production could expect around $100,000.
     
     
    "Some people seem to think that because it's cannabis and because of all the growth, the salaries are going to be so high," McMahon said. "And that's not the case. It's a bit more mainstream around the salaries."
     
     
    Anyone who wants to get into the industry should do their research, she added.
     
     
    "We can have a really great candidate with a great skill set, but if they haven't looked into what's happening with the industry at all ... that can potentially be a bit of detriment," McMahon said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Body Of Quebec Man, Missing For 2 Weeks In California, Found By A Family Member

    Body Of Quebec Man, Missing For 2 Weeks In California, Found By A Family Member
    According to police in Arcata, the body of 25-year-old Felix Desautels-Poirier was found in a marsh in a city park by a member of his family.

    Body Of Quebec Man, Missing For 2 Weeks In California, Found By A Family Member

    CCPA Report Calls For Expansion Of Pension Regulations

    CCPA Report Calls For Expansion Of Pension Regulations
    OTTAWA — A report by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives recommends that payments to shareholders such as dividends and share buybacks by companies should be limited if their pension plans are underfunded.

    CCPA Report Calls For Expansion Of Pension Regulations

    Quebec Man Sentenced To Life In Stabbing Of Grocery Clerk Appealing Verdict

    Quebec Man Sentenced To Life In Stabbing Of Grocery Clerk Appealing Verdict
    Defence lawyer Julie Giroux filed the appeal Monday and asked the court to either declare her client not criminally responsible due to a mental disorder or to order a new trial.

    Quebec Man Sentenced To Life In Stabbing Of Grocery Clerk Appealing Verdict

    Pakistan Punjab CM Shehbaz Sharif Writes To Amarinder Singh, Seeks Cooperation To Combat Smog

    Pakistan Punjab CM Shehbaz Sharif Writes To Amarinder Singh, Seeks Cooperation To Combat Smog
      Pakistan's Punjab province chief minister Shehbaz Sharif has suggested to his Indian Punjab counterpart a regional cooperation arrangement to tackle the issue of smog as well as pollution.

    Pakistan Punjab CM Shehbaz Sharif Writes To Amarinder Singh, Seeks Cooperation To Combat Smog

    Search Teams, Helicopter Scour Rugged Coquitlam Area For Missing Dogwalker

    Search Teams, Helicopter Scour Rugged Coquitlam Area For Missing Dogwalker
    Searchers from across Metro Vancouver are scouring a rugged area in Coquitlam for a woman and three dogs she was walking.

    Search Teams, Helicopter Scour Rugged Coquitlam Area For Missing Dogwalker

    Report Calls On Federal And Provincial Policies To Address Child Poverty In B.C.

    Report Calls On Federal And Provincial Policies To Address Child Poverty In B.C.
    A coalition of child and youth advocates says one in five children in British Columbia lives in poverty, but immigrant kids, off-reserve Indigenous kids and those from visible minority backgrounds are even worse off.

    Report Calls On Federal And Provincial Policies To Address Child Poverty In B.C.