CBC Edition

Scan your receipt to exit? Loblaw facing backlash as it tests receipt scanners at self-checkout

- Sophia Harris

In an attempt to combat theft at its stores, Loblaw is testing receipt scanners at four of its locations, the grocery giant told CBC News.

Customers who go through self-checkout must use the device to scan their receipt's barcode - con‐ firming that they paid some‐ thing - which opens a metal gate, letting them leave.

Loblaw didn't provide any further details, but CBC dis‐ covered the devices in a Loblaw-owned Zehrs and two Superstore supermarke­ts in southern Ontario.

Several shoppers were unhappy about them.

"It's very intrusive. It makes you feel like a thief," said Paul Zemaitis, who re‐ cently discovered a scanner at his local Zehrs in Wood‐ stock, Ont., some 70 kilome‐ tres west of Hamilton.

He said when leaving the self-checkout area, he didn't notice the scanner, so he pushed open the exit gate, prompting a loud alarm to go off.

WATCH | Customer un‐ happy with scanner:

"I said, 'What the hell's going on? I paid already.'"

Zemaitis said a store em‐ ployee helped him scan his receipt so he could leave without setting off the alarm again.

"It's just not a customerfr­iendly tactic," he said.

Jonathan Hayes says he also had a bad experience with the receipt scanner at the same store.

"It just introduced so much extra chaos," he said.

"You had some people, especially a lot of elderly folks, were completely un‐ aware this was a new thing, and were just pushing their carts through the closed gate," said Hayes. "It would trigger alarms. There were alarms going off maybe every one to two minutes."

He said using the scanner delayed the time it took for shoppers to exit the store. He was happy to see, when he returned a week later, that the device was out of com‐ mission - at least temporaril­y.

"Times are tough right now," said Hayes, referring to grocery prices which have risen 22.5 per cent since 2020, according to Statistics Canada.

Making shoppers use a re‐ ceipt scanner "is just kind of kicking them while they're down," he said.

'Organized retail crime' Many major retailers in Canada and the U.S. have beefed up security to combat theft even as some add more self-checkout machines to stores.

Over the past year, the Retail Council of Canada has repeatedly said that shoplift‐ ing is on the rise, driven in part by inflation.

Some studies also suggest self-checkout theft is a grow‐ ing problem because cus‐ tomers scan their own goods, sometimes far from the watchful eye of staff.

But in an email to CBC News, Loblaw suggested or‐ ganized crime is largely dri‐ ving retail theft.

"Organized retail crime across the entire industry is a serious issue, and has only gotten worse," said spokespers­on Catherine Thomas. She did not provide data to back up the claim.

She said Loblaw is explor‐ ing ways to curb the theft, in‐ cluding trying out receipt scanners in four stores.

"We are working hard to balance a need for enhanced security while at the same time preserving a welcoming and convenient customer ex‐ perience," said Thomas.

Loblaw also faced cus‐ tomer backlash last year when it introduced receipt checks by staff in several stores.

Toronto-based consumer advocate Daniel Tsai says re‐ ceipt scanners will inevitably generate the same response.

"Customers already feel imprisoned enough by high prices," he said. "The fact that you make regular shop‐ pers feel like criminals, that takes it a step too far."

Other major grocers - Sainsbury's in the U.K. and Safeway in the U.S. - have put receipt scanners in stores to combat theft. Both have also faced customer criticism. Legal issues?

Last week, Marshall Irwin discovered a not-yet-active receipt scanner when exiting his local Superstore in Georgetown, about 50 kilo‐ metres west of Toronto. He said a store manager told him it would soon be opera‐ tional.

Marshall said he hopes Loblaw's test-run doesn't pan out, claiming the retailer doesn't have the right to pre‐ vent shoppers from leaving the store.

"I pay for my goods, I have a receipt," he said. "You can't be detained against your will for no reason."

Tsai, who is also a busi‐ ness lawyer, says retailers can't enforce receipt checks unless they witnessed a shopper stealing, or their customers have signed up for a store membership, such as at Costco, where they agreed to the checks.

He also said retailers can't prevent shoppers from leav‐ ing the store unless they have evidence of wrong‐ doing.

"If they're stopping you and you feel like you don't have an ability to leave, and there is no basis for them to detain you, that qualifies as false imprisonme­nt," he said.

CBC News asked Loblaw

what happens to shoppers who refuse to scan their re‐ ceipt, and what customers do if they didn't buy anything and have no receipt. The re‐ tailer did not respond.

Marshall suggests that if Loblaw wants to reduce selfchecko­ut theft, it should open more cashier lanes.

"Bring back the cashiers. They're your first line of loss prevention," he said.

WATCH | Loblaw faces backlash over receipt scan‐ ners:

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