Truro News

Nunavut hopes first legal store might curb boozing

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After almost two decades of debate, the capital of Nunavut is hoping to reduce booze-related social problems by opening the territory’s first retail store for beer and wine.

“We need to take steps to help people change their behaviour towards alcohol,” said Dan Carlson, Nunavut’s assistant deputy finance minister. “We want to help people move away from the toocommon habit of binge-drinking hard alcohol.”

Since the 1970s, Nunavut has been the only jurisdicti­on in Canada where you can’t nip down to the nearest outlet and pick up a six-pack for the game or a bottle of wine for dinner. All liquor must be ordered from a government warehouse.

Some communitie­s ban alcohol, others allow limited purchases and others have local committees that decide who can order it in.

But booze is still easily available to anyone who wants to pay for a bootlegged bottle, which can fetch hundreds of dollars. RCMP still blame liquor for causing the vast majority of crime — including family and sexual violence — in communitie­s such as Iqaluit.

A number of reports have suggested selling low-alcohol beverages might stop drinkers from sitting down with a bottle of the hard stuff.

“We want to make it easier to access the lower-content liquor in the hope that will provide people with an alternativ­e to buying bootlegged liquor out of the back of someone’s house at two in the morning,” Carlson said.

And the government hopes easier access to beer and wine will cut down on bootleggin­g itself, he added. The Nunavut Liquor Commission has estimated that half the spirits it sells are resold illegally.

More than three-quarters of Iqaluit residents approved the new store in a 2016 plebiscite. But emotions on the issue still run high.

In a three-hour community meeting held before the vote, three people spoke in favour of opening the store.

Consequent­ly, Nunavut’s pilot project for liquor retailing will be unique in Canada.

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