{"id":110241,"date":"2018-01-22T08:30:48","date_gmt":"2018-01-22T13:30:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/depquebec.com\/?p=110241"},"modified":"2018-01-22T15:01:16","modified_gmt":"2018-01-22T20:01:16","slug":"plain-pack-satinder-chera-hard-at-work-pressing-ottawa-not-to-penalize-c-stores","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/depquebec.com\/en\/plain-pack-satinder-chera-hard-at-work-pressing-ottawa-not-to-penalize-c-stores\/","title":{"rendered":"Plain Pack: Satinder Chera Hard At Work Pressing Ottawa Not To Penalize C-Stores"},"content":{"rendered":"
The year 2017 ended without Bill S-5 on vaping and plain packaging of tobacco products being passed by the House of Commons.<\/p>\n
According to Satinder Chera, President of the\u00a0Canadian Convenience Stores Association (CCSA)<\/a>, 2019 is now the soonest retailers could feel the impact of this new piece of legislation.<\/p>\n In an interview with DepQu\u00e9bec<\/strong>, the main advocate of Canada’s 25,000 c-stores expressed concerns about the many impacts of this Bill on the retailers’ business model given that it addresses both vaping and tobacco packaging. And all this while the Federal government is busy legalizing cannabis!<\/p>\n “Our concern is simple: the playing field must remain fair for convenience stores,” said Satinder Chera.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Yet, the provisions on plain packaging and vaping are still very vague because everything ultimately depends on a regulation that will be drafted once the law is adopted and about which we know almost nothing<\/p>\n And when it comes to plain packaging, the CCSA President stresses that the government is going against the logic of its own cannabis policy:<\/p>\n “The adoption of plain packaging alone will have a huge impact on the 25,000 convenience stores’ operations in Canada, and we are very concerned,” said the president.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n In a special brief<\/a> on this issue (see illustration below), the CCSA highlights the government’s lack of coherence but above all, the significant impact of its plain pack Bill on retailers’ operations (see also this infographic<\/a> on the topic):<\/p>\n It is therefore a significantly larger effort that retailers will have to provide to continue selling this product and serving customers well.<\/p>\n The impact will also be enormous since the legislation will force manufacturers to completely redo the packaging of all their products. This will force retailers as well to get rid of all their inventory at some date, a quite complex, expensive and demanding operation.<\/p>\n And because the devil is in the details, it is all based on the regulations that will be adopted by Health Canada in relation to this legislation, once it is passed.<\/p>\n\n
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