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Independent grocers call for milk price pause amid calls to reduce food costs

TORONTO — The Canadian Federation of Independent Grocers is calling on the Canadian Dairy Commission to hit pause on any further increases to milk prices.
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The Canadian Federation of Independent Grocers is calling on the crown corporation that manages dairy supply and pricing to hit pause on any further increases amid political pressure to keep food prices down. Milk and dairy products are displayed for sale at a grocery store in Aylmer, Que., on Thursday, May 26, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

TORONTO — The Canadian Federation of Independent Grocers is calling on the Crown corporation that manages dairy supply and pricing to hit pause on any further increases to milk prices amid political pressure to keep food prices down. 

The Canadian Dairy Commission reviews the price dairy farmers are paid for their milk every fall and announces whether that price will increase or decrease the following February. 

The commission advised several industry groups in a memo Friday that the price of milk at the farmgate level could go up 1.77 per cent in February based on its calculations and its survey on the cost of production. 

However, if one or more of these stakeholders invokes an “exceptional circumstance mechanism,” the price adjustment will not be set by the formula but instead be set through consultations, the CDC said.

The CFIG invoked that mechanism in a letter to the commission Friday. The federation's senior vice-president Gary Sands wrote that the grocery industry is in an exceptional situation this year.

The food industry is currently under pressure to keep prices stable, with Industry Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne calling on the major grocers to come up with plans to stabilize prices.

Last Thursday, Champagne announced the major grocers have promised to offer discounts, price freezes and price matching. 

Sands argued that any increase in milk prices at the beginning of the supply chain would go against the government’s objective to stabilize food prices.

In the letter, he urged the CDC to suspend any planned price increases and to “hold further consultations within the context of the Government of Canada’s current desire to achieve price stability.”

It's particularly difficult for small and independent food retailers to handle these increases without passing them along to consumers, Sands said in an interview. 

“Here we are, in a time frame where the public has been told by the government that we're trying to achieve price stability,” he said. 

“If we're going to have price stability, it has to be for all Canadians. Not some Canadians, depending on where you shop.” 

Industry Minister François-PhilippeChampagne and Agriculture Minister Lawrence MacAulay were copied on the letter.

The Retail Council of Canada, whose members include the large grocers and which was one of the stakeholders that received the memo, declined to comment. Restaurants Canada, which also received the memo, declined to comment.

This is the second time such a memo has been sent to stakeholders, as well as to the media and the public, as part of the commission’s recent efforts to be more transparent, said Philippe Charlebois, a spokesman for the dairy commission. 

He said the stakeholders have until Friday to choose whether to invoke the exceptional circumstances mechanism, adding the commission can’t confirm which, if any, have chosen to do so already.

Next week, the commission has consultations planned with stakeholders, said Charlebois. If the mechanism is invoked, the February price adjustment will be determined through those consultations instead of through the commission's formula. 

The CDC has acknowledged receipt of the letter, said Sands. He said he gives the organization credit for heeding recent calls for more transparency into how it determines farmgate prices. This is the first time that the CFIG has been privy to the process leading up to the annual dairy price adjustment, he said.

Last year, the commission was under scrutiny amid breakneck inflation and rising costs for farmers as it approved a rare second increase to the farmgate price of milk. 

Industry observers at the time raised concerns over a lack of transparency in how pricing decisions are made by the commission.

Over the past year, the commission has met with the CFIG to discuss what goes into their pricing decisions, Sands said: "They're continuing to improve."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 10, 2023.

Rosa Saba, The Canadian Press

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