Ontario C-Stores Push For Sale Of Alcohol In Stores

CSD Staff Jul 25, 2012 More than 100,000 people have signed a petition to allow the sale of alcoholic beverages in Ontario convenience stores. The Ontario Convenience Stores Association is pushing a new petition to get permission to sell beer and wine in Ontario c-stores. According to The Globe and Mail report, the petition currently has 112,500 signatures from across the province, supporting the idea that there should be broader retail availability of beer and wine. Despite governmental promises to allow the sale of liquor in Ontario c-stores, nothing has changed for more than 30 years. Dave Bryans, Ontario Convenience Stores Association CEO, said some area c-stores are already selling alcohol to their communities if they don’t have stand-alone LCBO outlets. The Ontario Convenience Stores Association represents 7,500 of the 11,000 c-stores in Ontario.

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Xenophon asks Metcash to reconsider pokies plan

July 25, 2012 The Age Update A move by grocery wholesaler Metcash to extend the war for consumer dollars to pubs and poker machines has prompted Senator Nick Xenophon to write to the company’s board urging them to consider the social and economic harm caused by poker machines before making an investment. “One of the great things about IGA supermarkets is they have proudly proclaimed they are not in the pokies business. In fact, it has been a point of difference highlighted here in South Australia in their advertising,” Senator Xenophon said. “If Metcash gets into the pokies business, it will be buying into the misery caused by the 40 per cent of pokies losses coming from problem gamblers. I expect individual store operators here in South Australia will not be happy with this news.” He said the irony of Metcash’s reported move is that Woolworths and Coles are coming…

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Caltex axes 330 jobs as refinery closes

Chris Zappone July 26, 2012 The Age Petroleum company Caltex will close its Kurnell refinery in Sydney in a move that will cost 330 jobs. The decision follows a year-long review of the viability of the site. Caltex said the refinery would be closed in the second half of 2014 and would be converted to a “major import terminal” to supply imported fuel for Australian customers. The closure would eliminate about 330 positions, the company said. Kurnell is one of two major refineries operated by Caltex, with a second facility in Brisbane. Caltex, which provides about one-third of Australia’s refined petrol, began a review of its refinery operations in August 2011. The closure of the Kurnell facility ends months of speculation about the fate of the refineries that have hung over employees at both facilities. Caltex has been squeezed by the strength of the Australian dollar and the “challenging outlook”…

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Coles lacks some bottle in Woolies war

Adele Ferguson July 26, 2012 The Age Supermarket giant Coles continued to close the gap in the battle with its bigger rival Woolworths – getting some help from the government’s $2.8 billion assistance package – but its liquor business once again was a drag on overall revenue. The booze division is an issue that hasn’t been lost on management, which confirmed that the unit – which includes Liquorland and Vintage Cellars – is slicing at least 0.9 per cent off the group’s food and liquor revenue. In sharp contrast, Woolworths is going from strength to strength in its equivalent business, which boasts the successful Dan Murphy’s discount outlets. The relative mismatch puts pressure on Coles to lift its game given Woolworths turned over more than $6.6 billion in revenue in the past year. Coles is estimated to have made less than half of that. A decade ago, Coles dominated the…

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AusPost, Apple battle on the cards

Asher Moses July 26, 2012 The Age Australia Post is modernising its business for the digital age. Australia Post is significantly undercutting Apple in both cost and delivery times for printed cards that users can create on their smartphones with custom photos and text. The Postcards app is part of a digital transformation at the government-owned organisation that has seen parcel volumes climb by 10 per cent in the past year. We may not be sending many letters in the post but the 10 million Australians who shop online every year have been a boon for Australia Post. More than two thirds of its parcels now originate from e-commerce transactions and last year’s Christmas season broke Australia Post records. The Australia Post cards cost $1.99 for domestic postage and $2.99 for international postage. Just how much online shopping we are doing depends on who you ask. According to Morgan Stanley…

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Ethics in retail: casualty or cornerstone?

Retail business ethics and corporate social responsibility (CSR) have been hot topics on the retail agenda in recent years. As retailers have extended their reach, leveraging production, manufacturing and supply chains resources from a growing list of developed and developing countries, there has been extensive recent media coverage of retail with an increasingly ethical and CSR focus, for example in relation to the detrimental environmental effects of palm oil production, concerns about live animal transportation, the use of illegally logged timbers in furniture production, depleted fishing stocks, overseas working conditions and domestic supplier / retailer relations. Download the full article here!

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