Close X
Sunday, May 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ford's decision to speed up alcohol sales expansion will cost province $612M: report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jan, 2025 04:21 PM
  • Ford's decision to speed up alcohol sales expansion will cost province $612M: report

Premier Doug Ford's decision to speed up the rollout of alcohol sales in corner stores — which first sparked early election speculation last spring — will cost the province more than $600 million, Ontario's budget watchdog said Monday.

That's nearly three times the amount the Progressive Conservative government said it would cost to accelerate the timeline.

The Financial Accountability Officer wrote in a report Monday that the expansion of beer, wine and coolers to convenience stores, big box stores and more grocery stores will cost $1.4 billion through to 2030, and $612 million of that is due to the sped-up timing.

However, that could be much higher or much lower depending on rates of alcohol consumption and consumer behaviour, Jeffrey Novak wrote in his report.

"The actual financial cost to the province will depend on how retailers and consumers respond to the expansion of the beverage alcohol marketplace," he wrote.

"After accounting for these and other factors, the FAO estimates that the financial cost to the province could range from $529 million to $1.9 billion through to Dec. 31, 2030."

Ford's previous plan was to expand sales of those alcoholic offerings by 2026, but in May he announced that would instead happen in 2024.

The province said an "early implementation agreement" with The Beer Store involves Ontario paying the company up to $225 million to help it keep stores open and workers employed.

Novak 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 spirits taxes.

As well, Novak 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.

The report landed just days before Ford has indicated he will call a snap election, well over a year before the June 2026 fixed date, and the opposition pounced on the opportunity to frame the FAO's findings as evidence of financial mismanagement.

Liberal Leader Bonnie Crombie said it shows Ford has the wrong priorities.

"Doug Ford's priorities are clear, and they're not about serving you," she said. "The $1.9 billion, it could have been used to hire 1,400 family doctors — 1,400 — and that would have been able to care for two million people."

Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner said it's indicative of Ford's general spending patterns.

"Two billion dollars for a waterfront spa in Toronto, $3.2 billion on rebate cheques that are going to millionaires and billionaires — meanwhile our health-care system crumbles and housing starts are bottoming out,” Schreiner wrote in a statement.

Anne Kothawala, president and CEO of the Convenience Industry Council of Canada, said the alcohol expansion has provided a much-needed boost to the convenience sector as year-over-year December sales increased by 15 per cent from 2023 to 2024.

"Our store operators are excited to finally offer this product to customers and see the increased foot traffic from this move," Kothawala wrote in a statement.

"The report ignores the research about the impact of expansion on job creation and additional taxation into the provincial coffers."

NDP Leader Marit Stiles said the price tag shows Ford is not the shrewd operator he sets himself out to be.

"This is another example of Doug Ford and the Conservatives not being able to make a good deal for Ontarians," she said. "Doug Ford likes to pretend like he’s some great negotiator and he obviously can’t get a good deal done."

MORE National ARTICLES

Arya says he's out of Liberal leadership race, as Carney gets more caucus support

Arya says he's out of Liberal leadership race, as Carney gets more caucus support
One of the seven Liberal leadership hopefuls says the party is not allowing him to run, as another high-profile cabinet minister endorsed Mark Carney on Sunday.  Ontario member of Parliament Chandra Arya said the Liberal party informed him he's out of the running to be its next leader. 

Arya says he's out of Liberal leadership race, as Carney gets more caucus support

Auschwitz survivors fear rising hate could bring on another Holocaust 80 years later

Auschwitz survivors fear rising hate could bring on another Holocaust 80 years later
As she prepared to return to Auschwitz-Birkenau, Miriam Ziegler vividly recalled how it felt to be a little girl orphaned by the Nazis and left alone in a world ruined by war. Eighty years after the liberation of the Nazi concentration camp, the 89-year-old Ziegler said Monday the rising tide of "hatred" around the world makes her fear that history might be ready to repeat itself.

Auschwitz survivors fear rising hate could bring on another Holocaust 80 years later

Canada's border security package welcome but comes late, Republican senator says

Canada's border security package welcome but comes late, Republican senator says
A prominent Republican senator says Canada’s recent investment in border security — announced in response to U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff threat — is tardy but welcome. James Risch, chair of the U.S. Senate foreign relations committee, says border security should be a Canadian policy priority and he wants to see Ottawa make sustained investments.

Canada's border security package welcome but comes late, Republican senator says

Early morning shooting in Newton

Early morning shooting in Newton
Police in Surrey say they're investigating an early-morning shooting in Newton that left a home damaged by gunfire.  The Surrey Police Service says they got multiple calls about shots fired just after 3 a-m yesterday in the Newton area near the intersection of 142 Street and 72nd Ave. 

Early morning shooting in Newton

Langley RCMP breakup crowd at illegal street racing event with 'unruly' crowd

Langley RCMP breakup crowd at illegal street racing event with 'unruly' crowd
Police in Langley say they had to use pepper spray and a Taser as they dealt with an "unruly" crowd of young people at an illegal street racing event in the city Friday night. 

Langley RCMP breakup crowd at illegal street racing event with 'unruly' crowd

One driver dead at scene of multi-vehicle crash on Metro Vancouver bridge

One driver dead at scene of multi-vehicle crash on Metro Vancouver bridge
The Surrey Police Service says one driver is dead and others have been injured in a multi-vehicle collision on the Patullo Bridge, a key route in Metro Vancouver. Police say the crash around 8:30 a.m. Sunday involved five vehicles, including a bus on the east end of the bridge.

One driver dead at scene of multi-vehicle crash on Metro Vancouver bridge