Canadian Poultry Magazine

Quebec Restaurants Demand New Agri-Food Policy Addresses Supply Management Concerns

By The Canadian Press   

Features New Technology Production

January 17, 2012 – The Council of Chain Restaurants of Quebec (CCRQ) and the Canadian Restaurant and Foodservices Association (CRFA) will appear before the National Assembly's Committee on Agriculture, Fisheries, Energy and  Natural Resources today, calling for the government to address problems with supply management in the chicken and dairy sectors as they develop a new agri-food policy for the province.

January 17, 2012 – The Council of
Chain Restaurants of Quebec (CCRQ) and the Canadian Restaurant and
Foodservices Association (CRFA)
will appear before the National
Assembly's Committee on Agriculture, Fisheries, Energy and  Natural
Resources today, calling for the government to address problems with
supply management in the chicken and dairy sectors as they develop a new
agri-food policy for the province.

The CCRQ will highlight how current chicken and dairy policies drive up prices, limit innovation and create unfair competition among buyers.

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"Restaurants buy a third of the chicken produced in the province, but current
 policies mean we cannot source the types of products that our customers demand at reasonable prices," says Justin Taylor, Vice President of Labour and Supply at CRFA. "Government policies should drive innovation, not stifle it."

Restaurateurs will also demand that the province address unfairness in cheese pricing policies. Under the current policy, frozen pizza factories can purchase their cheese at deep discounts while restaurants have to pay as much as 30% more for the same cheese.

"Pizzerias must compete with frozen pizzas that are marketed as 'just-like-delivery' and receive a steep discount thanks to outdated government  policies," says Jean Lefebvre, Vice President of the CCRQ. "This creates an  unlevel playing field in the market."

Restaurateurs are calling on both provincial and federal governments to create agri-food policies in Canada that are fair and transparent and balance the needs of consumers, restaurateurs and producers.

"Instead of concentrating on limiting supply, we should be driving innovation  and developing markets for Quebec's high-quality food products," says Taylor.

The hearings in Quebec follow the launch of CRFA's Free Your Milk campaign  (www.freeyourmilk.ca ), designed to draw attention to the 40-year-old supply management policies responsible for inflating the cost of dairy in Canada to double the international market average.


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