Ford’s move to speed up alcohol sales expansion to cost Ontario $612M: report

10 months ago 8
ARTICLE AD BOX

By Allison Jones The Canadian Press

Posted January 27, 2025 9:29 am

1 min read

 'Ford government booze expansion to go under the microscope'

2:09 Ford government booze expansion to go under the microscope

WATCH: Ford government booze expansion to go under the microscope – Sep 16, 2024

Ontario’s budget watchdog estimates that the government’s decision to speed up the rollout of alcohol sales in corner stores will cost the province more than $600 million.

That’s nearly three times the amount the Progressive Conservative government said it would cost to accelerate the timeline.

The Financial Accountability Officer says in a report today that the expansion of beer, wine and coolers to convenience stores, big box stores and more grocery stores will cost $1.4 billion through to 2030, and $612 million of that is due to the sped-up timing.

Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.

Get daily National news

Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.

Premier Doug Ford’s previous plan was to expand sales of those alcoholic offerings by 2026, but in May he announced that would instead happen in 2024.

The province said an “early implementation agreement” with The Beer Store involves Ontario paying the company up to $225 million to help it keep stores open and workers employed.

Story continues below advertisement

 '‘Don’t mess around with people’s booze,’ Doug Ford says as LCBO strike ends'

4:20 ‘Don’t mess around with people’s booze,’ Doug Ford says as LCBO strike ends

Trending Now

That announcement first sparked speculation of an early election call — which Ford has now confirmed is happening Wednesday — when the premier was asked if he was trying to get booze in corner stores before an election and he wouldn’t commit to sticking to the June 2026 fixed date.

&copy 2025 The Canadian Press

Read Entire Article