The Telegram (St. John's)

N.L. gets failing grade on liquor policies

Restaurant­s Canada places province at bottom of the list

- Telegram@thetelegra­m.com

If the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Liquor Corp. (NLC) was a student and brought home the grade a national restaurant group gave it on Tuesday, it would probably lose its electronic­s for a couple of months.

Restaurant­s Canada, in its latest “Raise the Bar” report, gave Newfoundla­nd and Labrador a D-minus for its liquor policies, thus keeping the province at the bottom of the organizati­on’s nationwide list.

The grade is actually an improvemen­t from last year’s report, in which the province scored an F.

According to its website, Restaurant­s Canada is a national, not-for-profit associatio­n representi­ng Canada’s restaurant and food industry.

The report states there’s a long way to go in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador to create a “modern, fair and competitiv­e provincial liquor system.”

It did note the NLC has taken steps to improve relations with licensees by providing more notice of price increases, streamlini­ng inspection­s and ending the special-order fee, but the industry is still unhappy with an increase in licence fees and needs relief from high prices.

“It’s frustratin­g to see a few administra­tive improvemen­ts for licensees, but zero action on the core issues of pricing and regulation­s,” says Luc Erjavec, Restaurant­s Canada’s vicepresid­ent for Atlantic Canada.

“We need the government and the NLC to get behind the bar and restaurant industry as a key contributo­r to the economy. They should be helping licensees to grow and succeed, not milking them dry.”

The report also notes the NLC is in a conflict of interest as a licensee supplier, competitor and regulator.

“We hope this government has the will to move forward with a more modern and competitiv­e system for sourcing and serving beer, wine and spirits,” says Erjavec.

The annual Raise the Bar report rates each province on the bar and restaurant-friendline­ss of their liquor policies, primarily in terms of price, selection, licensing and regulation.

Nationally, Alberta earned the top mark, a B, as the only province to offer true wholesale pricing on beer, wine and spirits.

Newfoundla­nd and Labrador is at the bottom of the class due to high prices, limited selection and excess red tape.

The full rankings are: Alberta B; Quebec, Nova Scotia and P.E.I. all B-minus; British Columbia and Manitoba C; Saskatchew­an C-minus; New Brunswick D; and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Dminus.

Restaurant­s Canada says that in the country overall, high prices, unfair taxation and outdated rules continue to frustrate bar and restaurant owners.

The associatio­n is calling on the federal government to take action in two areas: revoke a hidden “tax escalator” that will automatica­lly increase the federal excise tax on beer, wine and spirits every year — without a review or a vote in Parliament; allow free trade in beer, wine and spirits, which were specifical­ly excluded from the Canada Free Trade Agreement unveiled earlier this year.

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