It’s non-stop shopping at the LCBO in Hawkesbury, Ont., and most of the clients are from the other side of the border in Quebec.
Quebecers are flocking to the store at all opening hours due to a lack of supply at the SAQ outlets.
“We decided to come here knowing we would get more choice because of what’s going on at the SAQ right now,” Armand Boudreau, an LCBO client from Vaudreuil told Global News.
A labour dispute between SAQ employees at the distribution centre and management has led to a shortage of supply at many SAQ outlets.
“In Quebec all the SAQ on strike. So, it’s empty,” Nathalie Nassif, an LCBO client from Saint-Sauveur, told Global News.
The SAQ workers recently rejected the latest contract offer by management but they’re not currently on strike. But the impasse with their employer has delayed deliveries of wine and spirits to SAQ outlets, leaving many shelves empty.
Get daily National news
“We decided to come here (LCBO) knowing we would get more choice because of what’s going on at the SAQ right now,” Armand Boudreau, LCBO client from Vaudreuil, told Global News.
It’s not just shoppers who are feeling squeezed by Quebec’s liquor commission.
The owner of the Taverne sur le Square in Westmount complains the SAQ conflict is dwindling his supply at the worst possible time and the control the SAQ has on the bar and restaurant industry in Quebec makes matters worse.
- Applicants for child care operator licences in Saskatchewan say they’re being denied
- More than $500M likely required annually for Calgary to meet affordable housing targets
- First-ever Saskatchewan commodity showcase connects producers with global buyers
- Montreal-area family hopes daughter’s cancer journey inspires blood donors
“What does a monopoly give me? It gives me a strike at Christmas time at the busiest time of the year after coming through a 18-month pandemic. It’s just unconscionable,” Stephen Leslie, owner of Taverne sur le Square, told Global News.
Quebecers will likely continue flocking to LCBO outlets on the other side of the border until the SAQ can guarantee its shelves will be plentiful.
Comments
Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.