What's changed in Ontario grocery stores since beer sales started - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 03:37 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Kitchener-Waterloo

What's changed in Ontario grocery stores since beer sales started

Select grocery stores in Waterloo Region are looking a little greener these days, not because of produce but thanks to the bottle-coloured signs indicating which checkouts can process beer.

Green signs indicate which checkouts can process alcohol sales

Certified cashiers wear green shirts that read "Beer Here," indicating to shoppers at which tills they can pay for alcohol. (Aadel Haleem/CBC)

Select grocery stores in Waterloo Region are looking a little greener these days, not because of produce but thanks to the bottle-coloured signs indicating whichcheckouts can processbeer sales.

After the launch of a pilot project by theprovincial government to make beer available inside Ontario grocery stores in December, the province promised to further open up liquor sales to 70 stores by the fall of 2016. That means shoppers could soon pick up wine under the same roof where they buy their cheese.

Mark Shedden is general manager of the Real Canadian Superstore in Kitchener, one of two Waterlooregionstores that are part of the pilot.

Here are some of the ways his grocery store is looking different since stocking beer, and what you might soon find at a grocery store near you.

Two prominent displays at the end of aisles called "endcaps"; one for domestic beer and another for craft breweries appear in beer-stocked stores like Mark Shedden's in Kitchener. (David Donnelly/CBC)
  • Two prominent displays at the end of aisles called "endcaps,"one for domestic product and another for craft breweries.
  • Cashiers certified by Smart Serve, the province's required training for all servers of alcoholic beverages.
  • Certified cashiers wear green shirts that read "Beer Here," showing shoppers which checkouts they can pay for alcohol at.
  • Green signs hang at checkouts indicating that they are beer-ready.About half the tills at Shedden's store can process beer sales but exactly how many can depend on the day, the time of year and staff availability.
  • Underage grocery store employees cannot stock or handle alcohol, sothey're likely to be staffed in the produce or general merchandise sections of the store.