The Standard (St. Catharines)

Ministers set deadline for grocery code of conduct

Empire CEO says Sobeys parent company ‘couldn’t be happier’

- SALMAAN FAROOQUI

Canada’s agricultur­al ministers have given the country’s grocers until the end of the year to propose measures to regulate the industry, in a move lauded by Canada’s second-largest grocery retailer to promote fairness in the market.

It comes after the ministers heard a report from a working group created to improve transparen­cy and fair dealings in the grocery industry during a meeting last week.

The working group had been establishe­d by the government in response to contentiou­s fees being charged to suppliers by grocers Loblaw Companies Ltd. and Walmart Canada.

“The set of findings shared today give all ministers a solid basis of understand­ing of why an industry-led proposal to improve transparen­cy, predictabi­lity, and respect for the principles of fair dealing would be beneficial for the agri-food sector and all supply chain partners,” said federal minister of agricultur­e Marie-claude Bibeau. “We are urging industry to continue their constructi­ve dialogue to develop a concrete proposal designed for the Canadian context that will improve fair dealing in retailer relationsh­ips with their suppliers.

The ministers are scheduled to meet next in Guelph in September.

Calls for a code of conduct also came after Loblaw, Walmart Canada and Metro Inc. ended temporary pandemic bonus pay programs for employees when lockdown restrictio­ns first eased and shopping behaviour normalized last year.

The chief executive of Sobeys parent company Empire Co. Ltd., which reintroduc­ed its pandemic bonus pay as provinces reinstated lockdowns, lauded the move toward a code for grocery chains.

“We couldn’t be happier with the announceme­nt and the leadership from the FPT Agricultur­e Ministers,” Michael Medline said in a statement.

“Empire will continue to be an active voice for an enforceabl­e code. It’s time to move with velocity.”

Loblaw did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. Metro declined to comment. In March, Walmart Canada said it didn’t believe that a “complex, legislated, bureaucrat­ic code is necessary.”

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