• joshhsoj1902@lemmy.ca
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    11 months ago

    In this case it’s directing profits away from us (a government owned business) and towards private companies.

    The typical conservative playbook will be to erode any advantages the LCBO has over the next 15-20 years, over time LCBO will struggle to compete because they pay their staff better, it’s more expensive to provide the wide range of selection they have now. They’ll need to cut back on the things that we love about the LCBO, stores will close because they can’t justify so many stores when customers have been cut in half.

    Then at some point the province will sell them to a private company. And that will be that.

    • jadero@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      Basically, the Saskatchewan playbook. We no longer have provincial liquor stores, and it shows in staff knowledge (lower), service levels (lower), and pricing (higher). To my eyes, selection has gone downhill, too, but that may actually be larger market forces. (I like a wide variety of beers, but detest the fruit-flavoured ones. It’s getting harder to find variety packs and especially variety packs that don’t include the fruit-flavoured ones.)

    • Anon819450514@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      We have a similar system in Quebec wine and spirits are sold by the government body, and we have beer and other alcool being sold in convenience store and groceries. It works… but I hate it. Why should we pay 24-30$ an hour for people to sell alcool. That makes no sense. Also okay g people selling weed is stupid.

    • Splitdipless@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      Actually, the agreement is with The Beer Store, a private enterprise that is mostly 2 global super-breweries. The current agreement prevents the LCBO from selling 24s of your beer so that Molson-Coors, AB InBev and Sapporo corner that format in the market. Removing the agreement allows the LCBO to carry large format, and possibly directing more shopping to a government owned outlet.