Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ottawa Moves To Lift Alcohol Trade Restrictions, Urges Provinces To Do The Same

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Apr, 2019 09:01 PM

    OTTAWA — The federal government has introduced legislation that it says will remove a final federal barrier to the easier flow of beer, wine and spirits across provincial and territorial boundaries.


    Now, it says, it's up to the provinces and territories to enact changes of their own that would allow for direct-to-consumer sales of alcohol across Canada.


    Internal Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc says the legislation, once passed, will remove the federal requirement that alcohol moving from one province to another go through a provincial liquor authority.


    The issue has rankled consumers for decades and was forced under a media spotlight a year ago when a New Brunswick man lost a five-year court battle to buy cheap beer in neighbouring Quebec.


    The Supreme Court of Canada unanimously ruled last April that provincial and territorial governments have the authority to restrict imports of goods from other jurisdictions and that Canadians do not have a constitutional right to buy and freely transport alcohol across provincial and territorial borders.


    LeBlanc said Tuesday that Canadians have been frustrated by provincial and territorial trade restrictions for too long.


    He has proposed changes to the federal Importation of Intoxicating Liquors Act that would aid lower levels of government in lifting those restrictions on the sale of Canadian beer, wine and spirits between provinces and territories. The changes are in the bill implementing the federal budget.


    "The proposed legislative amendments would remove the only remaining federal barrier to trade in alcohol, and the onus will be on provincial and territorial governments to change their own regulations, paving the way for direct-to-consumer alcohol sales from across Canada," LeBlanc said in a statement.


    "Removing barriers to trade between provinces and territories fosters economic growth, reduces the regulatory burden on our small and medium-sized businesses, and creates good, middle-class jobs across the country."


    Andrea Stairs, who manages eBay in Canada and Latin America, welcomed the federal move but said "the hard work now turns to provincial governments."


    "Interprovincial trade of alcohol is an opportunity to unlock economic prosperity by enabling Canada's (small and medium-sized businesses) to trade more freely," she said in a statement.


    Shortly after last year's Supreme Court ruling, the New Brunswick government indicated changes could be coming to the province's liquor laws.


    But the province's treasury-board president Roger Melanson, who is also the minister responsible for trade policy, also noted that regulation of the alcohol trade in New Brunswick brings tens of millions of dollars into provincial coffers annually — money that is redistributed to services including health care, education and infrastructure.


    The country's premiers last summer announced an agreement in principle to lift limits on how much alcohol residents can buy for personal consumption and transport across boundaries.


    Alberta and Manitoba have eliminated cross-border alcohol sales limits entirely.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    NDP Candidates Push For Stronger Climate Action As Jagmeet Singh Supports LNG Canada

    NDP Candidates Push For Stronger Climate Action As Jagmeet Singh Supports LNG Canada
    Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh is facing calls from within the party for a stronger stance on climate change as he defends his support of the $40-billion LNG Canada project in northern British Columbia.

    NDP Candidates Push For Stronger Climate Action As Jagmeet Singh Supports LNG Canada

    New Child Benefit A Centrepiece Of B.C. Budget Focused On Family Affordability

    VICTORIA — A new benefit will provide families in British Columbia with tax relief, depending on their household income and the number of children they have.

    New Child Benefit A Centrepiece Of B.C. Budget Focused On Family Affordability

    One Of Two Victims Dies After Feb. 15 Shooting In Kamloops, B.C.

    One Of Two Victims Dies After Feb. 15 Shooting In Kamloops, B.C.
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — One of two victims has died after being injured Friday in what RCMP in Kamloops, B.C., say is believed to be a targeted shooting.

    One Of Two Victims Dies After Feb. 15 Shooting In Kamloops, B.C.

    Halifax Fire Claims Seven Syrian Refugee Children: 'Everyone Is Devastated'

    Halifax Fire Claims Seven Syrian Refugee Children: 'Everyone Is Devastated'
    Seven children, all members of a Syrian refugee family, died early Tuesday in a fast-moving Halifax house fire described as Nova Scotia's deadliest blaze in recent memory.

    Halifax Fire Claims Seven Syrian Refugee Children: 'Everyone Is Devastated'

    Make Sure Measles Shots Up To Date, Public Health Agency Says In Wake Of B.C. Outbreak

    Make Sure Measles Shots Up To Date, Public Health Agency Says In Wake Of B.C. Outbreak
    Canada's top doctor is urging Canadians who haven't been vaccinated against measles to get their shots in the wake of a B.C. outbreak

    Make Sure Measles Shots Up To Date, Public Health Agency Says In Wake Of B.C. Outbreak

    'I Miss Her:' Calgary Man Who Strangled Wife, Buried Body In Basement Gets Day Parole

    'I Miss Her:' Calgary Man Who Strangled Wife, Buried Body In Basement Gets Day Parole
    Allan Shyback was convicted of manslaughter and causing an indignity to a body in the 2012 death of Lisa Mitchell.

    'I Miss Her:' Calgary Man Who Strangled Wife, Buried Body In Basement Gets Day Parole