Toronto Star

LCBO extending hours as strike deadline nears

Liquor board says it has plans to provide service if workers are off the job Monday

- ROBERT BENZIE QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU CHIEF

The LCBO is extending hours amid fears of a last call due to a possible work stoppage next week.

With 8,000 unionized workers at the provincial alcohol monopoly set to hit the bricks on Monday, some Liquor Control Board of Ontario stores will be open from 9 a.m. until11 p.m. starting Thursday.

“Extended store hours across Ontario will help accommodat­e customer shopping leading up to Canada Day and possible labour disruption,” the LCBO said in a statement Wednesday.

“We continue to bargain with the union’s bargaining committee, with the union in a legal strike position as of 12:01 a.m. Monday,” the Crown agency continued. “To ensure access to the best product selection and to avoid disappoint­ment, customers should shop in advance of Sunday . . . if possible,” it said.

“We remain focused on reaching a fair, sustainabl­e and responsibl­e collective agreement. However, in the event of a labour disruption, we have plans to provide some level of service.”

Details on those strike provisions are not yet known.

The booze retailer said some downtown Toronto outlets will keep the same long hours “in support of the City of Toronto’s Pride activities.”

They include stores at Cooper St. and Queens Quay, Front and Sherbourne Sts., Front and Jarvis Sts., Queen St. E. and Broadview Ave., and Maple Leaf Square at York St. and Lake Shore Blvd.

In the event that workers are not on strike over the Canada Day long weekend July 1, the LCBO is hoping to keep as many as 450 of its 650 stores open with the longer hours that Sunday. However, all outlets will be closed on the Saturday. They will be open Monday even though that is a statutory holiday.

Employees, 84 per cent of whom are part time, are seekinggre­ater certainty from the LCBO over scheduling and guarantees about eventually gaining full-time jobs.

When asked last week if she is worried there would be a “political price” to pay if liquor store workers are on strike on the Canada Day long weekend, Premier Kathleen Wynne conceded it’s a concern.

“I’m sure there will be those who will try to do that — blame me — but, again, there’s always more than one issue on the table at a given time,” she said at the time.

 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? George Soleas, CEO of the LCBO, which is facing a possible strike from its 8,000 workers. Starting today, the LCBO will open from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m.
RICHARD LAUTENS/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO George Soleas, CEO of the LCBO, which is facing a possible strike from its 8,000 workers. Starting today, the LCBO will open from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada