Skip to main content

Bring back the paper bags for booze, Ford says

The LCBO said it has received direction from the provincial government to reintroduce single-use paper bags at its retail locations. Photo by Divwerf / Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 DEED)

Paper bags for alcohol purchases will soon be offered again at Ontario liquor stores after Premier Doug Ford compelled the Crown corporation to reverse its earlier environmentally friendly initiative.

As part of its commitment to minimize the impact on the environment, the Liquor Control Board of Ontario (LCBO) stopped offering paper bags to customers in September 2023. The corporation said the initiative aimed to remove almost 135 million paper bags annually from LCBO retail stores and convenience outlets. The plan would have diverted 2,665 tonnes of waste from landfills and saved the equivalent of more than 188,000 trees every year.

In a brief email statement sent Monday to Canada’s National Observer, the LCBO said it has received direction from the provincial government to reintroduce single-use paper bags at its retail locations and will begin taking the necessary steps to do so.

“While we are unable to confirm when paper bags will be available again, we will share more details with our valued customers in the coming weeks.”

Ford explained his government’s decision to reverse the paper bag policy, saying: “At a time when many Ontario families are already struggling to make ends meet, every additional expense counts. That includes charging customers for reusable bags instead of the free paper bags that the LCBO previously offered,” in a letter to the LCBO president and CEO, shared with Canada’s National Observer by the premier's office. “This change has left people stuck openly carrying alcohol in public when leaving an LCBO store.”

Paper bags for alcohol purchases will soon be offered again at Ontario liquor stores after Premier Doug Ford compelled the Crown corporation to reverse its earlier environmentally friendly initiative. #LCBO #PaperBags #ReusableBags

Ford also questioned the environmental benefits of the LCBO's decision to replace paper bags with reusables. “The environmental merits of this decision are questionable at best. Paper bags are an easily recyclable alternative to single-use plastic, which is why the LCBO adopted them in the first place.”

The move comes as a new poll shows that most Canadians support a crackdown on single-use plastics and reduced plastic production.

Ford said it is understandable that people expect their government, and by extension, Crown corporations like the LCBO, to be mindful of these costs and to avoid imposing additional and “unnecessary” burdens on them. “As a government, we are focused on making life easier, more convenient, and more affordable for the people of Ontario. The decision to remove paper bags has had the opposite effect.”

The LCBO is responsible for retailing and distributing alcoholic beverages throughout Ontario, offering more than 28,000 items annually sourced from over 80 countries to consumers.

— With a file from Natasha Bulowski / Canada's National Observer.

Comments