Trade ministers say progress made reducing barriers on cross-border liquor sales
DIEPPE, N.B. — Canada’s internal-trade ministers say they are making progress on reducing barriers for interprovincial alcohol sales, even before the country’s highest court takes up the issue.
The Supreme Court of Canada will next month hear a case on cross-border liquor sales, but Ontario’s Brad Duguid says he prefers public policy be settled through what’s best for the public.
“My hope would be that our public policy will be gauged by the public interest rather than a court case necessarily, but we’ll have to see what emerges from that,” Duguid, Ontario’s minister of Economic Development and Growth, said Friday after the ministers met in Dieppe, N.B.
The top court is hearing the case of Gerard Comeau, who was arrested in Tracadie, N.B., after returning from Quebec with more alcohol than is allowed under New Brunswick law.


