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Is the Loblaw boycott privileged? Here's why some people aren't shopping around

- Natalie Stechyson

Location. Costs. Time and convenienc­e.

There are many reasons that people aren't participat‐ ing in the Loblaw boycott, a movement fuelled by cus‐ tomers fed up with high prices at the grocery retailer.

The boycott was started by a Reddit group with about 70,000 members called "Loblaws is out of control." It calls for shoppers to avoid the retailer's Loblaws stores, along with its offshoot brands, such as No Frills, At‐ lantic Superstore and Shop‐ pers Drug Mart, throughout May.

It comes as Loblaw and other major grocers such as Sobeys and Metro have faced intense scrutiny for reporting higher profits as some Cana‐ dians struggle to pay for food. On Wednesday, Loblaw reported its quarterly profit was $459 million, marking a 9.8 per cent increase.

Kirsten Marzitelli, 30, of Ottawa, said she considered participat­ing in the boycott, but that the price matching at No Frills - a subsidiary of Loblaw - is one of the very few things keeping her gro‐ cery bill manageable.

And there's also the mat‐ ter of time, she told CBC News.

WATCH | Why people are boycotting Loblaws:

"With a two- and threeyear-old at home, I just don't have the time to go to all of these different stores. I need as few stops as possible," Marzitelli said.

Boycotts are for people with privilege and time, said Shawn Chandler, who lives in Wallacebur­g, Ont., a town of about 12,000 people.

There are two grocery stores in the southweste­rn Ontario town about 50 kilo‐ metres south of Sarnia: No Frills and Walmart, Chandler, 52, told CBC News. There's al‐ so a Shoppers Drug Mart, which carries some grocery items.

Each week, Chandler's wife goes through the flyers to look for the best deals, he said. And this week, that's No Frills.

"I'm not going to spend more just to go to Walmart," he said.

Weston pushes back on 'misguided criticism'

Loblaw chairman Galen Weston, as well as the com‐ pany's new chief executive, pushed back Thursday on what they called "misguided criticism" of the grocer as the boycott gained steam online. While the movement started on Reddit, it gained traction on other social media plat‐ forms like X, formerly Twitter, and TikTok, and has made headlines coast to coast.

"As a well-known com‐ pany and Canada's largest grocer, it is natural that Loblaw would be singled out as a focal point for media and government and of course consumer frustra‐ tions," Weston said at the grocer's annual meeting.

He said although share‐ holders "may be troubled by these often-repeated sto‐ ries," they should be assured that Loblaw will continue to act with integrity.

President and CEO Per Bank said there's a lot of mis‐ informatio­n online about Loblaw, and reiterated the company is not responsibl­e for higher food prices. Infla‐ tion is a global issue, he ad‐ ded. Canadians are under pressure and frustrated, said Bank.

The Reddit group's founder, Emily Johnson, told CBC News Network Wednes‐ day that the boycott focuses on Loblaw because it has the largest market share.

Loblaw is a massive com‐ pany, extending into gro‐ ceries, as well as pharmacy, health and beauty, apparel, general merchandis­e, finan‐ cial services and wireless mo‐ bile products and services.

According to a July 2023 report by the U.S. Depart‐ ment of Agricultur­e, Loblaw had 27 per cent of the market share of Canadian grocery sales in 2021, fol‐ lowed by Sobeys at 19 per cent and Metro at 11 per cent.

"Our community felt that it was not the only problem, but definitely the biggest one," Johnson said.

In a previous interview with CBC News, she said she recognizes that Loblaw's market share leaves some people without many other shopping options. For them, the group has posted a list of other ways people can get in‐ volved, including writing a letter to their MP and donat‐ ing time or money to food banks.

In Canada's North, for in‐ stance, where high food prices are away of life, choices are even more lim‐ ited. The Loblaw boycott came up in a Yukon subred‐ dit with 15,000 members last month. The original poster asked if people planned to participat­e, and most of the 30 people who responded said no.

"I gotta eat. I understand the point of the boycott but there's no viable alternativ­e here and food isn't exactly optional," one person wrote.

"The other grocers in town are even more expen‐ sive. No chance," wrote an‐ other.

'Really comes down to convenienc­e'

Vanessa Baker-Murray, a lawyer living in Ottawa, said she wanted to participat­e in the boycott, and that she supports the idea behind it.

It's the kind of thing she would have done when she was younger, she said (and in fact, she and her husband participat­ed in a boycott of Dunnes grocery stores when they lived in Dublin in 2015).

But now, she has a young child and she and her hus‐ band both work full-time. She said a boycott just isn't as feasible as it was when her father-in-law used to dri‐ ve them further afield in Dublin just to avoid the local chain.

"It really comes down to convenienc­e. I don't shop at Loblaws because I love the store particular­ly, but it's very close to us, the pickup is so easy, we're on a schedule," Baker-Murray said.

"I hate supporting that and I hate supporting the companies, but it's just so hard to break out of that rou‐ tine and to know that you have to go to multiple stores, potentiall­y, and it's just so much more time."

Paul Landry, 75, said he's not participat­ing for a few reasons. First, there are only two major grocery stores

close to him in Stratford, P.E.I., and one is an Atlantic Superstore.

Second, he said he does‐ n't believe the boycott will ac‐ tually make a difference for food prices.

"Overall, Loblaw's prices are very high, not unlike the other major food retailer here, Sobeys. When these stores display two steaks for $76.97 or a lesser cut for $45.95, it's a problem for most Canadians," Landry said.

"What are these cattle being fed - gold dust? Prices will not decrease until they are forced to by government action."

Marzitelli said she feels the boycott is "absolutely privileged," noting that she already doesn't shop at

Loblaws, Your Independen­t Grocer or Shoppers Drug Mart because of the high prices. No Frills is her best option, even if it's Loblawowne­d, she said.

"I feel like the only people who are actually able to com‐ mit to the boycott don't have a family of mouths to feed or weren't hurting that badly to begin with."

WATCH | Nova Scotians participat­e in the boycott:

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