Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Alberta Judge Rules Against Plan To Ban Pharmacy Loyalty Reward Program

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Apr, 2016 11:20 AM
  • Alberta Judge Rules Against Plan To Ban Pharmacy Loyalty Reward Program
EDMONTON — Albertans can continue to collect reward points for pharmacy purchases.
 
A Court of Queen's Bench judge has ruled the regulator of Alberta pharmacists does not have the legal power to impose a ban on consumer loyalty programs.
 
The Alberta College of Pharmacists wanted to impose such a ban on pharmacists and pharmacies in 2014, but the Sobeys grocery chain challenged the plan in court.
 
"There is no evidence of actual or reasonable possible harm to customers (patients) as a result of loyalty programs or other forms of inducements," Justice Vital Ouellette said in his written judgment.
 
Ouellette also said inducement prohibitions do nothing to protect consumers from incompetent or unethical pharmacists.
 
He said the College's plan would amount to controlling the way commercial businesses operate and compete among themselves in terms of prices offered to consumers and costs.
 
Sobeys said it is delighted with the ruling.
 
"At a time when many Albertans are facing economic challenges, the court’s decision is particularly welcome news," Vivek Sood, spokesman for Sobeys National Pharmacy Group, said in an email.
 
"Encouraging competition and making prescriptions and pharmacy services more affordable has been at the core of our challenge of the Alberta College of Pharmacists."
 
In April 2014 the College voted to amend its code of ethics to prohibit its members from providing or being part of consumer loyalty programs that are based on the sale of drugs or professional services.
 
At the time, the College said it made the decision because pharmacists and technicians are health professionals, not simply vendors of drugs.
 
Sobeys argued that millions of Albertans collect rewards points such as Air Miles at pharmacies and a survey suggested most consumers considered a ban unfair.
 
The grocery giant also said studies suggest loyalty programs build stronger bonds and encourage better patient adherence to prescription medication.
 
A judge granted Sobey's request for a stay of the college's plan in June 2014 pending the outcome of the court case.
 
Shirley Nowicki, an Alberta College of Pharmacists spokeswoman, said the court ruling was being reviewed but declined further comment.
 
The Alberta judgment follows a unanimous British Columbia Court of Appeal ruling in January in favour of bylaws passed by B.C.'s pharmacist regulator that banned incentives for prescriptions or pharmacy services. An earlier B.C. court decision had struck down the ban.
 
The College of Pharmacists of British Columbia hailed the appeal court ruling, saying it considers the provision of incentives like redeemable points to be unethical, unsafe and unprofessional.
 
Nova-Scotia-based Sobeys is owned by Empire Co. Ltd. (TSX:EMP.A).
 
The company says it owns or franchises more than 1,500 stores in all provinces under the Sobeys, Safeway, IGA, Foodland and other banners.

MORE National ARTICLES

Some 34,000 Quebec Teachers Off The Job To Protest Lagging Contract Talks

Some 34,000 Quebec Teachers Off The Job To Protest Lagging Contract Talks
MONTREAL — French-language public school teachers are off the job today in some parts of Quebec as they protest lagging contract talks with the provincial government.

Some 34,000 Quebec Teachers Off The Job To Protest Lagging Contract Talks

Judge Rules Against Hockey Icon Guy Lafleur In Civil Suit Targeting Crown, Cops

Judge Rules Against Hockey Icon Guy Lafleur In Civil Suit Targeting Crown, Cops
MONTREAL — A Quebec Superior Court justice has ruled against former Montreal Canadiens great Guy Lafleur in his $2.16-million civil suit that targeted police and the Crown following a 2008 arrest.

Judge Rules Against Hockey Icon Guy Lafleur In Civil Suit Targeting Crown, Cops

B.C. Lags In Protecting Sensitive Health Data: Privacy Commissioner

Privacy Commissioner Elizabeth Denham says authorities are not legally obligated to report privacy breaches, which could involve sensitive personal information from HIV tests, to mammograms or routine blood results.

B.C. Lags In Protecting Sensitive Health Data: Privacy Commissioner

Canada Approves Refugee Claim Of Man Who Fled Somalia After Death Threat

Canada Approves Refugee Claim Of Man Who Fled Somalia After Death Threat
The Immigration and Refugee Board told 32-year-old Yahya Samatar at a hearing in Winnipeg today that his claim was accepted.

Canada Approves Refugee Claim Of Man Who Fled Somalia After Death Threat

Retroactive change of law prompts OPP to drop probe of RCMP gun data destruction

Retroactive change of law prompts OPP to drop probe of RCMP gun data destruction
The Ontario Provincial Police have dropped an investigation into the RCMP's destruction of gun registry data, saying the alleged offences no longer exist under a back-dated, retroactive Conservative law passed last spring.

Retroactive change of law prompts OPP to drop probe of RCMP gun data destruction

Families First: Minister Lisa Raitt Urges Airlines To Stop Separating Parents, Children

 Canada's transport minister quietly wrote to the heads of every major airline in the country earlier this year to try and stamp out a practice where parents were being seated separately from their children on flights.

Families First: Minister Lisa Raitt Urges Airlines To Stop Separating Parents, Children