Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank the witnesses. We appreciate your time and your testimony in this important conversation, because what we're talking about is food, and that is a fundamental need. Households have less flexibility to reduce their spending in this area compared to others.
I will begin my questioning with Empire Company.
Mr. St-Laurent, we appreciate your being here. Just for our listeners, Empire owns supermarkets, convenience stores and drug stores, including Sobeys, IGA, Safeway, Farm Boy, Foodland and FreshCo.
To go back to history, in 2014 the Competition Bureau began an investigation that Loblaw had abused a dominant position within the grocery sector by adopting unfair business practices with suppliers.
Back in 2017, the Competition Bureau executed a search warrant to investigate charges that five Canadian grocery chains, including yours, had conspired with two bread producers to fix prices on bread sold in stores between 2001 and 2015.
In 2020, the House of Commons and Standing Committee on Industry and Technology had meetings to investigate allegations that the larger grocers had coordinated to end bonus payments for frontline staff who worked in the stores in those first few months of the pandemic, and now we hear the Competition Bureau is looking to further investigate.
Given this history, this track record, in conjunction with the fact that Canada's three biggest grocery chains have all posted these profit increases much higher than the rates of the wages of workers, one can see why the perception exists among Canadians that these conversations we're having are necessary, yet Mr. Michael Medline, the CEO of Empire Co. Ltd., said that public criticisms of grocer profits were “reckless and incendiary attacks”.
Do you support that opinion? What measures do you think are necessary to show this change in perception and to show Canadians more transparency from your company and the grocery industry as a whole?