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  • Ontario CStore Day goes virtual

    CStore Days will once again take place throughout Ontario, but with a twist.
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  • The latest vaping news

    As a category, vaping is in flux, with new rules and regulations rolling out across the country in 2020.
  • Parkland teams up with Amazon Web Services to ramp up digital transformation

    Parkland Corporation is collaborating with Amazon Web Services to use analytics in order to improve its logistics and enable frictionless commerce.
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  • Consumers flocked to online shopping as pandemic hit, with e commerce sales up 99%

    Canadian consumers flocked to online shopping as the measures to combat the COVID-19 pandemic were enacted, according to a Statistics Canada report.
  • B.C.'s new vaping rules a blow to c-stores

    The British Columbia government is moving ahead with regulations designed to making vaping less appealing for young people by restricting the availability of vaping products in convenience stores.During a news conference last week, the province’s Health Minister Adrian Dix said the sale of flavoured nicotine vapour products will be restricted to adult-only shops: “We have the power to restrict flavours.
  • Nova Scotia making mask wearing mandatory in most indoor public places by July 31

    C-stores are included in the new rules Nova Scotia is making mask-wearing mandatory in most indoor public places beginning July 31 - even for performers singing at concerts.
  • Manitoba government offers more subsidies for businesses hit by COVID-19

    The Manitoba government is extending and expanding a wage-subsidy program to spur job creation during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Quebec has become the first Canadian province to make mask-wearing mandatory in all indoor public places for people aged 12 years and older.Premier Francois Legault said the new directive enters into effect Saturday - just in time for the province's annual construction holiday.Businesses will be expected to enforce the new rules and are subject to fines of between $400 and $6,000 if their customers are caught violating the health directive, Legault told reporters Monday in Montreal.He said the government is considering imposing fines on individuals beginning in August.
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