A community college in New Brunswick is offering a course in horticulture tailored to equip students with the skills to work in a growing industry – cannabis cultivation. A school official said that the cannabis cultivation course would launch sometime next year and was designed in collaboration with industry leaders to train skilled workers in the highly regulated medical cannabis industry.
Since the legalization of recreational cannabis use in Canada on Oct. 17, 2018, several colleges have offered a cannabis cultivation course to meet the growing need for labor in this sector.
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The New Brunswick Community College (NBCC) was one of the first schools to offer a cannabis cultivation course. The program was before legalization and is oriented towards the medical cannabis industry.
Sophie Maugeais worked in horticulture before teaching at NBCC. Since taking over from her predecessor, who set up the program, she is now in her third cohort.
Her objective is to train future technicians in the cannabis sector through the cannabis cultivation course and to ensure that they adapt to the reality of the market.
“I’m really trying to teach them how to get information. My goal is to teach them to learn,” said Maugeais.
During the 20-week cannabis cultivation course at NBCC, students are going to learn about plant nutrition, processing, climate, and integrated pest and disease management.
This control could be a major challenge given the limited number of pesticides previously allowed in cannabis cultivation. Maugeais estimated that there were about 20 of them which forced future producers to use insects to eat the parasites.
The program includes a visit to a cannabis factory, often beneficial to guide students in their future careers.
“Sometimes students find a passion for other departments of the industry such as mining or processing,” said the teacher.
In fact, neither New Brunswick Community College nor the City of Ottawa, which will offer a similar program in September 2020, will be able to handle cannabis off-campus.
NBCC prefers to simulate basil plans, given the similarities between the two plants.
In Ottawa, students will have the opportunity to explore the different varieties of cannabis, maintain the plants and protect them from pests. In addition, the program teaches production scheduling and quality control.
The New Brunswick Community College and La Cité College will offer courses on cannabis legislation. However, another institution also offers the opportunity to take this course in French. The University of Ottawa has a French program that applies specifically to cannabis legislation.
Enrolment, which is ongoing, shows that there is a real interest in cannabis cultivation courses among students.
However, for Frédéric Thibault-Chabot, Dean of Education at La Cité College, it is not necessarily the cannabis aspect that particularly interests students.
“These are people who are looking for a program that will show them the right skills and not the other way around. They’re not trying to say that’s what I want to learn in my program. No! They’re people who don’t know much about the field and want to improve their skills,” Maugeais says, describing her students.
“The course is not very demanding. This is not a university course, but it still takes a lot of study and students with a bit of seriousness. Most are passionate about the plant and others are interested in having a guaranteed job afterward.”
In early November, a group of five Canadian colleges and institutions founded the Canadian College Consortium for Cannabis, whose mission is to oversee cannabis cultivation courses in college institutions.
Pierre Clavet, NBCC’s representative for the consortium, said that the association has focused mainly on three areas since its inception. First, it collected studies on the skills sought by employers in the cannabis industry. Then, Pierre Clavet became involved in applied research.
This gathering is composed of NorQuest, Niagara, Durham, and Okanagan Colleges. The NBCC is the only French-speaking member.
However, for Pierre Clavet, this does not mean that French-language colleges offering cannabis cultivation courses are isolated.
“Francophone colleges also make their voices heard through different types of partnerships,” he said, opening the door to the integration of new members into the Consortium.
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(Featured image by nastya_gepp via Pixabay)
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