Thank you and good afternoon, Mr. Chair and committee members.
My name is Julie Dickson Olmstead, and I am speaking to you from the traditional unceded territory of the Katzie, Semiahmoo, Kwantlen and Coast Salish Peoples of British Columbia. We very much appreciate the opportunity to be here today to provide a perspective from the west.
I'm here on behalf of the Pattison Food Group, which is Canada's largest western-based provider of food and health products, originally established in New Westminster, B.C., in 1915. Collectively we employ 30,000 team members, and our companies are proud to be recognized as among the top 100 employers in B.C. and Canada.
We have 11 retail banners, with close to 300 food and drug retail locations throughout western Canada, Whitehorse, Yukon, and Washington state and Oregon. Our largest and signature company is Save-On-Foods.
Our four wholesale businesses cater to nearly 2,000 independent grocers, restaurants and specialty retailers, from B.C. to Quebec. We operate five food and pharmacy production facilities.
Innovation is a hallmark of our company, and agility has never been more important to our business than in the last two-plus years. Supporting our communities is at the heart of our business. We serve over 2.3 million Canadians every week, travel tens of millions of miles annually on western Canadian highways and depend on all forms of distribution to move our goods efficiently.
Doing business with local growers, producers and suppliers is a key priority for us. We carry thousands of locally made products from more than 3,500 local growers and producers, including up to 75% of our produce when in season.
With that backdrop, and in consideration of the short time we have, allow me to focus on the following, and then I'll be happy to answer any questions.
In the food sector, the greatest impediment to growth is the lack of regulatory harmonization and coordination. Understanding that food regulations lie with different jurisdictions in Canada, it cannot be said often enough that these disparate rules represent the greatest costs and greatest growth impediments for small to mid-size grocery businesses.
With that in mind, we would encourage this committee to consider convening provincial, territorial and federal agri-food officials, and industry stakeholders including grocers, to come together to review, address and agree on a framework that would not only eliminate regulatory barriers in the supply chain but also allow for greater speed of innovation. This includes food, but also transportation, labour and various other matters.
Of great importance is a focus on better alignment and communication between federal ministries, specifically Agriculture Canada, Health Canada, and Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, and the need for these ministries to better understand the role of all stakeholders in the agri-food supply chain, which includes small, mid-size and large grocers.
Grocers and their partners in the agri-food supply chain continue to incur huge costs from the inconsistent rules and regulations and the lack of harmonization in standards and increasing red tape.
Speaking of regulations, let me address a question that was asked by members of this committee regarding the proposed grocery code of practice.
As a member of both the Retail Council of Canada and the Canadian Federation of Independent Grocers, both of which serve on the FPT code steering committee, I can attest to the hard work under way to develop a made-in-Canada code, one that reflects the unique nature of our country and its agri-food sector, and one that is national, inclusive of all supply chain partners, reciprocal, mandatory, enforceable and non-regulated.
Speaking on behalf of many of my colleagues, I would ask that we avoid referring to it as the “retail fee code”, but more accurately refer to it as the “grocery code”.
Finally, I would urge this committee to support the ongoing work of the FPT industry steering committee. It has taken time to develop a framework and ensure that there is extensive stakeholder engagement, but I believe you would agree with me when I say that no code would be better than a bad code. We all want a good code, one that will ensure stability, healthy competition and fair negotiations, sustained growth and a thriving agri-food sector in Canada, and also one that doesn't add costs and complexity to the business, which would ultimately drive up the cost of groceries for consumers.
In closing, together with government, we must enable the Canadian food industry to build a sustainable food supply system, with competitive pricing for consumers, by levelling the playing field between domestic businesses and multinationals so that Canadian businesses can compete. This includes investing in new technologies and innovation, and investing in ways that enable our sector to attract and retain a skilled workforce that can meet the demands of today and tomorrow. We must guard against over-regulation and red tape.
If there is a lesson we have learned during the events of the past two years, and more recently during the catastrophic climate events that happened in British Columbia last November, it's that when we truly partner together to solve problems, we can move mountains overnight, literally.
To be successful, we must together collaborate and commit to innovate with urgency.
Thank you.