Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ontario Allows Grocers That Sell Beer To Add Craft Cider To Store Shelves

The Canadian Press, 24 Jun, 2016 12:56 PM
    WATERLOO, Ont. — The first 60 grocery stores in Ontario allowed to sell beer can now add ciders to their shelves.
    The Liquor Control Board of Ontario is also seeking bids for another 70 grocery stores to sell beer, cider and wine starting this fall.
     
    Premier Kathleen Wynne says craft producers have turned locally made cider into one of Ontario's emerging success stories.
     
    The LCBO reported sales of locally produced craft cider increased 54 per cent last year to $5.1 million, while sales of Ontario craft beer rose 35 per cent to $69 million.
     
    Wynne visited a grocery store in Waterloo to announce the next step in the province's modernization of the way alcoholic beverages are sold, the first real changes since prohibition ended in 1927.
     
    Ontario started allowing sales of six packs of beer in several dozen grocery stores last December, and they sold $7.9 million worth of suds in the first four months.
     
    The plan is to eventually have up to 300 grocery stores, both large chains and smaller independents, selling wine, beer and cider, and another 150 grocers could be authorized to sell just beer and cider.
     
    In addition, 150 of the 292 existing private retail wine outlets that operate just outside grocery stores will be allowed to move inside, use a shared checkout, and expand their product lines to include any Ontario produced wines.
     
    When the Ontario grocery stores are given the green light to start selling wine later this year, they will have to charge a minimum price of $10.95 a bottle.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta Announces Sweeping Six-year Overhaul Of School Curricula At Cost Of $64 Million

    Alberta Announces Sweeping Six-year Overhaul Of School Curricula At Cost Of $64 Million
    Eggen says his department will work with teachers and administrators to redefine six core subjects simultaneously, with all the work done within six years.

    Alberta Announces Sweeping Six-year Overhaul Of School Curricula At Cost Of $64 Million

    Rates Of Chronic Disease Higher Among Aboriginals: Cancer Care Ontario

    The organization says rates of disease are higher among first nations, Inuit and Metis populations than their non-aboriginal counterparts.

    Rates Of Chronic Disease Higher Among Aboriginals: Cancer Care Ontario

    Wildfire Loss To Oilsands At Least 30 Million Barrels Worth $1.4 Billion

    CALGARY — Analysts say lost oilsands production from the Fort McMurray wildfires could top 30 million barrels and cost the industry upwards of $1.4 billion.

    Wildfire Loss To Oilsands At Least 30 Million Barrels Worth $1.4 Billion

    CRTC Announces New Fund, Minimum Programming Hours, For Local TV News

    CRTC Announces New Fund, Minimum Programming Hours, For Local TV News
    OTTAWA — Canada's broadcast regulator is forcing English-language TV stations to air at least seven hours a week of local news, and creating a new fund to help the smaller ones pay for it as part of a "rebalancing" of the country's television landscape.

    CRTC Announces New Fund, Minimum Programming Hours, For Local TV News

    Cape Breton University Soccer Player Banned From Play After Drug Violation

    OTTAWA — An elite soccer player from Cape Breton has been banned from the game for 18 months after admitting to taking a prohibited substance last year.

    Cape Breton University Soccer Player Banned From Play After Drug Violation

    Canadian Brands Cashing In On 'Anti-Trumpism' To Appeal To Americans

    Canadian Brands Cashing In On 'Anti-Trumpism' To Appeal To Americans
    Canadian companies are cashing in on so-called anti-Trumpism in the United States, offering our neighbours to the south an escape plan should Donald Trump win the presidential election in November.

    Canadian Brands Cashing In On 'Anti-Trumpism' To Appeal To Americans