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  • 11/17/2022

    SkipTheDishes names Howard Migdal new CEO, Kevin Edwards to retire

    Howard Migdal head shot

    WINNIPEG - Food delivery app SkipTheDishes has named Howard Migdal as its new chief executive officer.

    The Winnipeg-based company says Migdal, who previously served as Skip's chief operating officer, will replace Kevin Edwards.

    Edwards led the company for the last five years and is due to retire.

    He took over as CEO from Skip's founders in 2018 with a mandate to grow the company, but spent much of his tenure focused on navigating the COVID-19 pandemic and launching Skip Express Lane convenience and grocery stores.

    Migdal was one of the co-founders of GrubCanada, a national food delivery platform, and has 16 years of experience in the food business.

    He has worked for Skip for four years, starting as its managing director of Canadian operations.

    -The Canadian Press

  • 11/10/2022

    CFIA warms not to use, sell, serve or distribute Tim Hortons soup base recalled for containing insects

    A Tim Hortons branded chicken noodle soup base was recalled in Alberta and southwestern Ontario because it contained insects.

    In an emailed statement, Tim Hortons said Thursday the recall does not impact canned soups sold in grocery stores, only the soup base that was made and sold to a few isolated restaurants. It said there were no reported illnesses.

    The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) said the recalled product was available to purchase in those provinces up to and including Oct. 20.

    The agency said the soup base, which weighs 3.54 kilograms per unit, was sold to hotels, restaurants and institutions.

    Tim Hortons said the incident only impacted a few isolated Tim Hortons restaurants, but the company proactively asked all restaurant owners that received product from the supplier in question to dispose of their product.

    The company said the impacted batches were removed from restaurants, destroyed and replaced with new product from another supplier.

    Chicken noodle soup base in other provinces, as well as canned Tim Hortons soup sold in grocery stores, are manufactured by another supplier and were therefore not affected, Tim Hortons said.

    The recall involves products with best-before dates between March 13, 2023 and April 30, 2023.

    The CFIA said not to use, sell, serve or distribute the product.

    Tim Hortons said it is investigating the issue and believes relatively few guests were impacted, but added it will only restart production with the manufacturer once it's confident this problem will not happen again.

    -The Canadian Press

  • 10/18/2022

    Metro says it won't accept supplier cost hikes over holidays to keep prices stable

    Metro Ontario inc. office in Etobicoke, Toronto, Canada. Metro Inc. is a Canadian food retailer operating in the provinces of Quebec and Ontario.

    MONTREAL - Metro Inc. says it will not accept cost increases from its suppliers over a three-month period in order to keep grocery prices stable during the holidays.

    The grocer says this is a long-standing practice at Metro to avoid retail price changes during the busiest time of the year.

    Marie-Claude Bacon, a spokeswoman for the Montreal-based company, says this applies to Metro's private-label brands and national brand products and runs from Nov. 1 to Feb. 5.

    Metro's comments come a day after Loblaw Companies Ltd. said it would freeze prices on all its No Name products until next year as double-digit food inflation sends grocery bills spiralling.

    Loblaw said it locked in prices of the popular house brand, which includes more than 1,500 grocery items, until Jan. 31, 2023.

    However, Metro's comments suggest it's not without precedent for grocers to hold the line on prices during the holiday shopping season.

    -The Canadian Press

  • 10/18/2022

    Soaring prices at the grocery store fuelled Canada's inflation in September

    vector illustration on the theme of rising food prices. The rise in prices for products. grocery set, food basket, stack of coins and up arrow. trend illustration in flat style

    OTTAWA - Canadians are continuing to feel the pinch at the grocery store as food prices soared last month at the fasted rate since August 1981.

    Statistics Canada's latest consumer price index report shows that while overall inflation cooled slightly to 6.9% for the month of September from 7.0% inflation in August, food prices were up a staggering 11.4% compared with a year ago.

    Statistics Canada says food prices have been increasing at a faster rate than all the items the consumer price index tracks for 10 consecutive months.

    Statistics Canada says on a year-over-year basis, Canadians paid more for items such as meat, which was up 7.6%, dairy products, which rose 9.7%, bakery products, which rose 14.8%, and fresh vegetables which were up 11.8%.

    The agency says unfavourable weather conditions contributed to food price increases.

    Higher prices for important inputs such as fertilizer and natural gas, as well as geopolitical instability stemming from Russia's invasion of Ukraine also contributed to the increases, Statistics Canada says.

    -The Canadian Press

  • 10/15/2022

    Voters to decide on California ban on flavored tobacco

    vaping ice cream cone, signifying flavours

    SAN DIEGO (AP) - Two years ago, California banned flavoured tobacco products such as menthol cigarettes and cotton candy vaping juice, arguing that they mostly attracted kids and were especially dangerous amid the coronavirus pandemic when youth deaths spiked from respiratory complications.

    But the law never took effect. Tobacco giants, including R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. and Philip Morris USA, spent $20 million on a campaign that gathered enough signatures to put the issue to the voters.

    Californians now will decide on the Nov. 8 statewide ballot whether to toss out the law or keep it.

    The issue has set off a fierce fight. The tobacco companies are pushing hard to keep from being shut out of a large portion of California's vast market. Meanwhile, supporters of the ban, who include doctors, child welfare advocates and the state's dominant Democratic Party, say the law is necessary to put a stop to the staggering rise in teen smoking.

    However, the California Republican Party wants to repeal the law, saying it would cause a giant loss in tax revenue. The independent Legislative Analyst's Office estimates it could cost the state tens of millions of dollars to around $100 million annually.

    If voters approve, California would become the second state in the nation to enact such a ban after Massachusetts. A number of cities, including Los Angeles and San Diego, have already enacted their own bans.

    It's already illegal for retailers to sell tobacco to anyone under 21. But advocates of the ban say flavored cigarettes and vaping cartridges are still too easy for teens to obtain. The ban wouldn't make it a crime to possess such products, but retailers who sold them to kids could be fined up to $250.

    The ban, which passed the Legislature with bipartisan support, would also prohibit the sale of pods for vape pens, tank-based systems and chewing tobacco, with exceptions made for hookahs, some cigars and loose-leaf tobacco.

    The tobacco industry's campaign has painted the ban as being especially bad for Black and Latino people, who use menthol at higher rates than others.

    "It's unfair for communities of colour. Bad law. Bad consequences,'' said one online banner ad paid for by RAI Services, a subsidiary of Reynolds American, which is the parent company of R.J. Reynolds Tobacco.

    But the ads drew a backlash from some Black leaders who call the campaign offensive.

    "I am insulted that the tobacco industry would make an effort to make us believe that mentholated cigarettes are part of African American culture, and that this is a discriminatory piece of legislation against Black people,'' then-Assemblywoman Shirley Weber said before the Legislature voted on the ban. Weber, a San Diego Democrat who chaired the California Legislative Black Caucus, is now California's secretary of state.

    So far the campaign to allow the law to take effect has raised more than $6 million, nearly four times more than the effort to stop it, according to state campaign finance records.

    Some small neighbourhood market owners favour repealing the law, calling it another blow to their businesses as they struggle to recover from a drop in sales during the pandemic.

    -The Associated Press

  • 10/14/2022

    New online grocery service now delivering in Iqaluit

    Bayside Foods delivery truck

    A new online grocery store opened in Iqaluit last month.

    Bayside Foods started taking same-day delivery orders on Sept. 7. Unlike other existing grocery stores in the city, the outlet offers doorstep delivery.

    Iqalummiut are already trading stories about the company online.

    "Super fresh fruits that I have never seen all over Iqaluit in my three years of living here. Very reasonable pricing,'' posted Ramkumar Pandiarajan, who ordered from the grocery service.

    The company's Facebook page is already filled with positive reviews.

    "Great options, reasonable prices, fast delivery and the best customer service! And who doesn't love groceries delivered right to your door,'' wrote Vanessa Imelda, another satisfied customer.

    According to Vincent Yvon, the company's chief executive officer, the store is filling a big need.

    "The city needs a store like ours because a lot of residents are too busy to eat well,'' he said. "By giving our customers the option of getting fresh whole foods delivered to their door, we're adding to the healthy eating culture in Iqaluit.''

    Yvon also explained the company has big plans for Iqaluit.

    "We hope within the next year to deliver to more than 50 households per day and to give back to the community through employment opportunities and continued savings at the cash register,'' he said. "We want to bring more culturally appropriate foods to our diverse customer base as well.''

    He went on to explain how they make sure the food stays affordable.

    "We're always comparing prices locally to make sure we are priced very well, and we use suppliers like Northern Shopper that understand our community's need for affordable, high quality food,'' he said.

    -Nunavut News

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