Open borders with Quebec have New Brunswick beer drinkers hitting the road again - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 12:15 PM | Calgary | -12.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Open borders with Quebec have New Brunswick beer drinkers hitting the road again

With the New Brunswick and Quebec border all but sealed to the general public during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, new figures show sales of alcohol at outlets throughout northern New Brunswick shattered records.

N.B. Liquor sales were up 30 per cent across the north of the province when borders were closed

Beer in Quebec can be 50 cents cheaper per can than in New Brunswick. It's enough for hundreds of locals to justify regular trips across the border. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

With the New Brunswick and Quebec border all but sealed to the general public during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, new figures show sales of alcohol at outlets throughout northern New Brunswick shattered records.

But the gains appear to be temporary.

Denis Albert ownsLeMarch du Village, which serves as N.B. Liquor'sagency outlet in the northwestern communityofHaut-Madawaska.

Albert's storesold $1.36 million worth of beer, wine and other alcohol products between April 2020 and March 2021 according to N.B. Liquor records, a stunning 172 per cent increase over the previous year.

Albert believes that is a clue to the amount of cross borderliquor purchases in his area in normal times.

"A lot of people buy their beer in Quebec," he said.

"The province of New Brunswick was closed. People came here becausethey didn't have any choice."

Le March du Village sells beer and wine in Haut-Madawaska. Sales jumped 172 per cent when the border to Quebec was closed during the pandemic but collapsed when restrictions were lifted in June. (Google Maps)

New Brunswick has long fretted over the number of people who buy cheap liquor in other provinces, mostly Quebec, and bring it into the province.

It successfully fought a five year long legal battle with Tracadie resident Gerard Comeau to assert its right to restrict amounts New Brunswickresidents can bring with them from other provinces.

Comeau, a retired N.B. Power lineman, was stopped at the New Brunswick-Quebec border byRCMPin 2012 andfined $292.50 for having 14 cases of beer, two bottles of whisky and one bottle of liqueur in his vehicle.

But it has never been clear how many Gerard Comeaus are out there, until the pandemic closed the border.

Gerard Comeau of Tracadie drove to Quebec for cheap beer in 2012 and was issued a $292.50 ticket for bringing back too much - 14 cases. He fought the ticket all the way to the Supreme Court in 2018 but lost. (Serge Bouchard/Radio-Canada)

Liquor sales all over New Brunswick were affected by COVID-19 restrictions in differentways, but the most dramatic changes happenedin the north where sales across the region instantly jumped an average of 30 per cent

N.B. Liquor's ten northern corporate stores stretching from Grand Falls and Edmundston in the northwest all the way around to Bathurst and Neguac in the northeast posted combined sales increases of $12.7 million during the year compared to a combined sales decline of $1.1 million in NB Liquor stores serving the cities of Moncton, Saint John, Fredericton and Dieppe.

In addition, a cluster of 13 agency stores sprinkled throughout the north, from St. Quentin to Balmoral to Renous recorded additional sales increases of $7.4 million.

N.B. Liquor's sales jumped significantly during the first year of the pandemic, led by increases in northern New Brunswick. (N.B. Liquor/Facebook)

Included in that number is the agency outlet in tiny Saint Arthur, south of Campbellton, which had sales more than triple to $809,000

It's unclear how much of those increases are due to the closure of normal traffic between New Brunswick and Quebec during the first 15 months of the pandemic, but it's likelya significant amount.

The largest sales increases among N.B. Liquor corporate stores all came in those closest to Quebec border crossings including Campbellton (+75.0 per cent), Dalhousie (+56.7 per cent) and Edmundston (+36.7 per cent)

N.B. Liquor did not respond to a request for information about the issue, but Denis Albert said there is no question in his mind what happenned, because customers have disappeared and sales have plummetedat his store since the Quebec border opened in June.

"It's decreased maybe 75 per cent," he said