logo
Few Ontario grocery stores accepting booze empties, some weigh returning licences

Few Ontario grocery stores accepting booze empties, some weigh returning licences

CTV News4 days ago

Beer cans and wine bottles are stacked as props in front a display of ice cream, at a press availability attended by Ontario Premier Doug Ford at a convenience store in Toronto, Thursday, Dec. 14, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young
TORONTO — Very few Ontario grocery stores that are required to accept empty alcohol containers are doing so, leaving the future of the deposit return program in question as The Beer Store closes locations across the province.
Only about 70 grocery stores — ones that are more than five kilometres away from a Beer Store — have been required to take empties since last fall but only four are complying, says The Beer Store, which operates the deposit return system.
On Jan. 1, 2026, all grocery stores selling beer and wine — more than 1,000 are licensed, according to the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario — will have to accept bottle returns as part of Premier Doug Ford's move to speed up the availability of alcohol.
The Ministry of Finance says 13 of the grocery stores are complying and the rest of them with current obligations are 'expected to join over the coming months.'
But Jan. 1 is also when The Beer Store is allowed under Ford's alcohol agreement to close an unlimited number of stores, and with so few grocery stores already participating and others threatening to hand back their licences rather than participate in the deposit return program as currently structured, the program that saw 1.6 billion containers returned last year could be in jeopardy.
Karen Wirsig, a senior program manager at Environmental Defence, said the program allows for beer bottles to be reused, ensures the effective recycling of most alcohol packaging and keeps millions of tonnes of material out of landfills.
'As the Beer Stores keep closing, that will kill the Ontario deposit return program,' she said. 'If you don't make returns convenient for people, they won't do it.'
John Nock, president of the union representing The Beer Store employees, said there should be some enforcement to ensure the grocery stores get deposit return systems up and running so consumers can get their 10 or 20 cents per container.
'If they're allowed to sell alcohol ... they should take returns,' he said.
'Why are (we), the public, paying a deposit to the government that we can never get back? Or we've got to drive a half an hour (to the nearest Beer Store) to get our $2 or $3 back.'
Grocery stores have for months voiced their concerns with the program, from sanitation issues and space constraints to a sheer cost effectiveness calculation. Earlier this month associations representing both small and large grocers wrote a joint letter to the premier warning they will stop selling alcohol if the program isn't improved.
'Unless urgent changes are made to build fairer economics and to move away from a mandatory return-to-retail recycling system, our grocery members have advised that their stores will start the process of reviewing their future participation, potentially exiting the category all together,' wrote the Retail Council of Canada and the Canadian Federation of Independent Grocers.
Adding insult to injury, they say, is a move by the government in its budget to increase a wholesale alcohol discount from 10 to 15 per cent for bars, restaurants and convenience stores — who do not have to accept empties — but not grocery stores, who do.
'It's inexplicable,' said Gary Sands, senior vice-president of public policy and advocacy with the Canadian Federation of Independent Grocers.
'If anything, what they should have been doing is saying, 'In light of the fact that we've dumped all the recycling on you guys, we're going to increase your allowance and we'll leave the others as it is.' Instead, it's the reverse.'
It puts grocery stores at a competitive disadvantage, Sands said.
'(Ford) promised us that when he rolled out the new system, there would be no winners and losers,' he said. 'He's broken that promise.'
The big grocery chains, through the Retail Council of Canada, are echoing those concerns. Loblaws is testing a return-to-retail system at one location and is finding it's 'ludicrously expensive,' said Sebastian Prins, director of government relations for the retail council.
'It's tightening already tight margins,' he said. 'Our folks just want to be able to kind of compete on a level playing field.'
The AGCO has started sending grocers some 'compliance letters,' Prins said, but the language is fairly soft for the time being.
There are many steps the government could take to help enable grocers to offer return systems, Prins said, such as looking at removing the deposit from beer cans and leaving those to the blue box system.
'Even something as simple as the government saying, 'We are going to convene major grocers and The Beer Store in a room to talk about is there a cheaper mouse trap that can be built here' — even that would be seen as forward progress,' he said.
'They've kind of got all their levers pushed to zero.'
Ford's previous plan was to get beer, wine and ready-to-drink cocktails in convenience stores and all grocery stores by 2026, but in May of 2024 he announced that would instead happen that year.
An 'early implementation agreement' with The Beer Store involves the province paying the company up to $225 million to help it keep stores open and workers employed.
The province's financial accountability officer said there will also be a $215-million cost as a result of lower tax revenues as grocery, big box and convenience stores are not subject to beer, wine and spirit taxes.
As well, the FAO said there will be $172 million in lower net income to the Liquor Control Board of Ontario. While there will be a $1.1 billion increase in wholesale LCBO revenue, there will also be an approximately $812 million decline in LCBO retail revenue, a $192 million cost to give wholesale discounts to new retailers, $150 million in service rebates to brewers, $105 million in higher operating expenses, and $22 million in higher recycling fees.
Under the agreement, The Beer Store has to keep at least 300 stores open up to the end of this year, but starting in 2026 there is no minimum number.
Ozzie Ahmed, vice-president of retail for The Beer Store, said in a statement that the stewardship of alcohol containers is an important part of retailer responsibility.
'Annually The Beer Store processes about 1.6 billion alcohol containers, more than we sell in our own network of stores,' Ahmed wrote.
'This diverts waste from landfills, recycling facilities and ensures consumers have an easy and convenient way to get their deposit back.'
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 30, 2025.
Allison Jones, The Canadian Press

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Liberals say they aren't bound by vote calling for budget or fiscal update before summer
Liberals say they aren't bound by vote calling for budget or fiscal update before summer

Globe and Mail

time33 minutes ago

  • Globe and Mail

Liberals say they aren't bound by vote calling for budget or fiscal update before summer

The minority Liberal government says it is not bound by a House of Commons vote this week calling on it to release a budget or economic update before the summer recess. The House of Commons is currently debating a motion in response to the government's May 27 Throne Speech, which was read by King Charles III and outlined the re-elected Liberal government's policy priorities. On Monday evening, the opposition parties voted together to approve a Conservative amendment to the Liberal motion that called for a 'a firm commitment to present to Parliament an economic update or budget this spring, before the House adjourns for the summer.' The motion was approved in a 166-164 vote. Conservative MPs repeatedly called on the government Tuesday during Question Period to meet the timeline laid out in the motion. Andrew Coyne: The only thing worse than not having a budget is having one 'Last night, the House passed our Conservative motion calling on the Prime Minister to table a spring budget,' Conservative MP Kelly McCauley said. 'Will the Prime Minister respect the will of Parliament and table a budget immediately so Canadians and this Parliament can have the transparency we deserve?' Prime Minister Mark Carney acknowledged the vote result but did not commit to moving up the timing of the 2025 budget. 'We take note of last night's motion,' he said, before listing his government's plans to support health care, child care, dental care and affordability measures. Throughout his responses to questions about the motion, Mr. Carney repeatedly highlighted his Monday meeting with provincial and territorial premiers. The meeting focused on potential large infrastructure projects as well as eliminating barriers to trade and investment. 'Unlike the members opposite, we know how to grow this economy without spending money,' he said, drawing howls from the opposition benches. He then pointed to his efforts to remove restrictions on interprovincial trade. Opinion: A Throne Speech fit for a king. But where's the budget? Liberal Government House Leader Steven MacKinnon played down the implications of the vote earlier in the day. 'It was a non-binding advisory resolution of the House of Commons. I suspect you're going to see a lot more of them,' he told reporters on his way in to a cabinet meeting on Parliament Hill. Mr. MacKinnon said the main vote on the Throne Speech will take place Wednesday and is a confidence vote. He did not commit the government to bringing in a budget or update before summer. 'I think we'll take note of having been urged,' he said. Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne originally said last month that the government would table an economic update in the fall, which suggested there would be no 2025 budget. However, Mr. Carney later said the government will release a full budget in the fall. Mr. Carney has said there wasn't enough time to release a budget in June given the late start of Parliament this year because of the federal election campaign. Federal budgets are typically released in February or March. Mr. Carney has also said the government faces important spending decisions in the near term related to potential support for large infrastructure projects and larger defence spending commitments at the NATO summit later this month. During Question Period, Mr. Champagne also said 'we take note of the vote yesterday,' but made no pledge to table a budget before the summer recess, which is scheduled to begin June 20. The House of Commons is set to resume sitting on Sept. 15.

Canucks: The Thatcher Demko dilemma of injury versus durability, pay versus trade
Canucks: The Thatcher Demko dilemma of injury versus durability, pay versus trade

National Post

time39 minutes ago

  • National Post

Canucks: The Thatcher Demko dilemma of injury versus durability, pay versus trade

How much is too much? Article content If you're the Vancouver Canucks ' braintrust, assessing long-term competitiveness and compensation for starting goaltender Thatcher Demko is like the Rubik's Cube. Trying to properly align all sides can be tedious. Article content At his best, Demko is among the NHL's elite stoppers, and a Vezina Trophy finalist nomination in 2024 spoke to superiority when healthy. In 51 games in 2023-24, before being sidelined by a freak popliteus knee-muscle strain, he posted career-best 2.45 goals-against average, .918 saves percentage and five shutouts. Article content Article content And there's the rub. Article content From career hip, groin and knee ailments — plus that mysterious popliteus predicament at back of his knee in April of 2024 — a string of setbacks have tested the resolve to endure arduous rehabilitations. Demko did the work and nothing is impeding preparation for a heightened level of readiness next season. Article content However, it's the unknown that makes durability and contract-extension parameters a double dilemma for management. Demko, 29, has a year remaining on his expiring extension at a $5-million US salary-cap hit, and his camp can start talking contract on July 1. Article content Article content 'It's such a rare injury, but it could occur again if he were to have a movement or contact that causes the injury,' B.C. physician Dr. Harjas Grewal told Postmedia on Monday. 'Some of the ways it could happen are direct contact to the outer knee, or even just rotation of his knee while it's flexed. Article content Article content 'Most muscles in the leg work to move the knee forward and backward. The popliteus is unique and important in starting flexion of the knee. To get into a butterfly, or any other position, the initial bending of the knee is initiated by the popliteus. Article content Article content 'These types of plays happen a lot, and this injury is so rare that it would shock me to happen again. In terms of prevention, there's not much he could do outside of regular strengthening exercises and ensuring he has good mobility. Article content 'Managing his workload helps to reduce risk, but that's true for essentially all muscular injuries.' Article content Demko missed 15 games this season with an undisclosed Feb. 8 ailment, but had an encouraging run before that setback. A 3-1-1 run featured an encouraging 1.25 GAA, .952 saves percentage, and a shutout. Article content How the Canucks' crease conundrum plays out is like that Rubik's Cube. Kevin Lankinen, 30, has a five-year extension at $4.5 million in annual average value kicking in next season. And Arturs Silovs, 24, has a year left on his deal at $850,000 before becoming a restricted free agent with arbitration rights.

B.C. woman used Personal Real Estate Corporation to make $500K loan to spouse, violating rules
B.C. woman used Personal Real Estate Corporation to make $500K loan to spouse, violating rules

CTV News

time42 minutes ago

  • CTV News

B.C. woman used Personal Real Estate Corporation to make $500K loan to spouse, violating rules

Houses are shown in Vancouver on Friday, Aug. 19, 2022. (Darryl Dyck / The Canadian Press) A B.C. real estate agent has agreed to pay more than $50,000 to a provincial regulator after admitting to two separate instances of misconduct involving her common-law spouse. Rui Liang, also known as Rena Liang, entered a consent order agreement with the B.C. Financial Services Authority over the misconduct last month. The document was published online last week. In it, Liang and her Personal Real Estate Corporation agree to pay the BCFSA a $50,000 administrative penalty and $5,000 in enforcement expenses. According to the consent order, a $5-million mortgage was registered against a Vancouver property in favour of Liang's company – referred to throughout the decision as 'RL PREC' – in February 2019. The mortgage amount was mistakenly registered an order of magnitude higher than it was intended to be, the document indicates, describing it as a 'spousal loan' of $500,000 to Liang's common-law spouse Peter Ho Chiu Chu. The loan was related to a house the couple was building, and Chu was the registered owner of the property, according to the consent order. Under B.C.'s Real Estate Services Act and its associated regulations, Personal Real Estate Corporations are not allowed to 'conduct any business other than the provision of real estate services and ancillary services directly associated with the provision of real estate services,' the consent order reads. By allowing a mortgage to be registered in favour of RL PREC, Liang and her corporation violated this rule. 'In April 2022, the mortgage was transferred from RL PREC to Ms. Liang personally and the amount of the mortgage was amended to $500,000,' the consent order reads. The other misconduct Liang and RL PREC admitted to in the document also stemmed from their relationship to Chu. According to the consent order, Chu has been the owner of a company called '168 Rock Solid Homes' since it was incorporated in 2008. The company began providing rental property management services 'in or around 2012,' despite not being licensed to do so, the document indicates. 'Ms. Liang knew that neither Mr. Chu nor Rock Solid Homes was licensed to provide rental property management services, nor exempt from the requirement to be licensed,' the consent order reads. Despite this knowledge, Liang directed the successful applicant for a rental home in West Vancouver to get in touch with Chu, who the property owner had hired to manage the property, according to the consent order. This constituted facilitating or supporting unlicensed property management, which is 'conduct unbecoming' under the Real Estate Services Act, Liang admitted in the document. In addition to the $55,000 in penalties she and RL PREC agreed to pay in the consent order, Liang also agreed to complete the Real Estate Trading Services Remedial Education Course at UBC's Sauder School of Business, according to the consent order. Liang and her corporation have no previous discipline history with the BCFSA, the document notes.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store