Penticton Herald

Loblaw gift card policy probed

Privacy watchdog investigat­ing after ID required from some customers to get $25 gift card

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The Privacy Commission­er of Canada said Wednesday it has opened a full investigat­ion into how Loblaw Companies Ltd. has required customers to produce personal identifica­tion to secure a $25 gift card related to the alleged bread price-fixing scandal.

The investigat­ion comes after a formal complaint to the office, as well as numerous inquiries to its informatio­n centre and through its Twitter feed, said spokeswoma­n Tobi Cohen.

“We have reached out to Lobaws following media reports about authentica­tion practices related to the issuing of bread price-fixing gift cards,” she said by email.

The investigat­ion comes as Loblaw Companies Ltd. provided some insight Wednesday into why select customers are required to produce a driver’s licence or utility bill to secure the card.

Various triggers might lead the company to ask for further confirmati­on, including large numbers of registrati­ons from a single address, multiple requests under a single or similar name, or irregulari­ties such as an invalid address or email in a registrati­on, said Kevin Groh, Loblaw vice-president of corporate affairs.

“Our plan to distribute tens of millions of dollars is a natural target for fraudsters, and we want to make sure this money is actually landing in our customers’ hands.”

The vast majority of customers won’t be required to make the additional step, said Groh.

Privacy Commission guidelines say individual­s should be made aware of the reason the informatio­n is being collected and that it should only be used for the purposes for which it was collected.

“If there is no legal requiremen­t to do so, or the organizati­on does not intend to maintain an ongoing relationsh­ip with an individual, it likely does not need to identify an individual,” said the document linked to the tweet.

It added that a driver’s licence or a social insurance number shouldn’t be used as an identifier because they were created for different purposes.

Groh said the company is only collecting the informatio­n for verificati­on purposes and will then destroy it.

“This program is designed to pay people back quickly and directly, without requiring proof of purchase or forcing customers to wait for a class-action lawsuit . . . for a small percentage, we’ve asked for proof of name and address,” he said in an email.

Loblaw has offered customers a $25 gift card as a goodwill gesture after admitting participat­ion in what it says was an industry-wide arrangemen­t to fix bread prices.

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