B.C. wineries 'disappointed' by provincial trade ruling, but door opens for future challenges - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. wineries 'disappointed' by provincial trade ruling, but door opens for future challenges

The lawyer who represented vintners in the case says the Supreme Court of Canada ruling offers new opportunities to challenge old laws.

Lawyer who represented vintners says ruling offers new opportunities to bring down old barriers

Red wine is poured from a bottle into a glass.
The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled today on whether Canadians have a constitutional right to buy and transport alcohol including wine across provincial borders without barriers. (AP Photo/Luis Hidalgo)

B.C. wineries and business owners say they're disappointed by the Supreme Court of Canada's decisionupholding the constitutionalright of provinces to limit the cross-border flow of goods.

But the lawyer who represented West Coast wineries in the case says the ruling could be a good thing, as it creates a new opportunity to challenge old barriers.

Thursday's decision effectively preserves the current trade rules, saying provinces have the power to enact laws that restrict commerce if there is another overriding purpose like maintaining public safety or a monopoly.

The decision dashes the hopes of many Canadians who were hoping to have easier access to cheaper and sought-after products particularly beer and wine from other provinces.

Christine Coletta led the group of B.C. wineries who joined the Supreme Court case in hopes of gaining direct-to-consumer wine sales across the country. (Okanagan Crush Pad Winery)

It's also a defeat forfive small B.C. wineries that joined the case as third-party intervenors, hoping to have the national market thrown wide open.

Christine Coletta, co-owner of theOkanagan Crush Pad winery in Summerland, B.C., led the group of vintners and saidshe's disappointed by the decision.

"[This case]was a lost opportunity to really open up the provincial trade barrier and have Canada positioned as one market," saidColetta."We should be able to freely do business across our home country."

She explained thatCanadian wineries are disadvantagedby their inability to ship their product between provinces without restrictions unlike the U.S., for example, where states can trade freely with one another.

Coletta said she and the other intervenors "will get their heads together" in coming days to process the ruling.

Shea Coulson spoke for 50th Parallel Estate, Liquidity Wines, Noble Ridge Vineyard and Winery, Okanagan Crush Pad Winery and Painted Rock Estate Winery throughout the case. (Coulson Litigation)

A silver lining

Shea Coulson, the lawyer who represented the B.C. intervenors,is more optimistic about the ruling.

The ruling allowing interprovincial barriers as long as the primary goal of the restriction is not to impede trade or "punish" another province.

So, it's nowunconstitutionalto enact a law or a policy that, as its primary purpose, imposesa tariff or "tariff-like" measure on another province's products.

Coulson says that means the door has been opened for B.C. wineries to challenge existing laws that explicitly makeit difficult for their wine to get into provinces like Ontario, which has a policy saying an Ontarian cannot import B.C. wine.

Ontarians are currently not allowed to import B.C. wine.

"These sorts of measures are in place across the country and I think we're going to see a whole bunch of legal challenges now, and governments are going to have to respond to this decision," Coulson said.

"For all B.C. wineries, this is a very positive decision."

Consequences for pipeline battle

Coulson also said the ruling comes at interesting time in provincial trade, given B.C. and Alberta's trade relationship beingsullied in the ongoing battle over the Trans Mountain pipeline project.

Under this ruling, the lawyersaid, Alberta'sban of B.C. wine enacted by Premier Rachel'sNotley solely to pressure B.C. over the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion would "almost certainly be unconstitutional."

He said the same would "unequivocally" apply to Bill 12, which seeks to give Alberta's energy minister new powers to limit energy exports to B.C.or fine companies $10 millionby the day.

Gerard Comeauwasthe man at the centre of the cross-border trade case. He's aNew Brunswick retiree, who drives from his home in Tracadiesome 160 kilometres north of Monctonto Quebec, where it's cheaper to buy beer and liquor.

RCMPfined him $292.50 for having 14 cases of beer, two bottles of whisky and one bottle of liqueur in his vehicle at theNew Brunswick-Quebec border in 2012.

In an interview before the decision came down, Comeau said he expected the court to eliminate barriers altogether.