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Grocery flyers to only reach Montreal households that request them

More than 200,000 Quebecers currently receive the flyers, called Publisac in Quebec
4/11/2022

Montreal Mayor Valerie Plante said Monday grocery store flyers will be delivered only to residents who request them, marking a win for environmentalists and prompting criticism from the company behind the advertisements.

Starting in May 2023, locals who still want to receive the flyer bundles—dubbed the Publisac in Quebec—will have to slap a sticker on their door, Plante said. The bags will no longer be plastic.

The move follows a public consultation by the city and years of criticism from environmental groups demanding a ban on Publisac deliveries.

But TC Transcontinental, a Montreal-based packaging and printing company, says an opt-in system would effectively end its flyer distribution due to prohibitive costs and complexity.

The 46-year-old firm says the current opt-out model, where residents can unsubscribe by contacting the company via its Publisac website, is "simple and effective."

It says the deliveries currently go out to more than 200,000 Quebecers, including 120,000 Montreal households, allowing them to take advantage of grocery deals.

"The Publisac, in addition to giving consumers access to discounts, distributes local newspapers at an advantageous cost, helps merchants to attract customers and compete against the giants of e-commerce, and supports thousands of direct and indirect jobs," Patrick Brayley, vice-president of Transcontinental's distribution segment, said in a statement.

"We intend to assert our rights and those of our customers if necessary."

A verdict is pending in Transcontinental's legal case against the City of Mirabel, which switched to an opt-in system for Publisac in October 2019.

Plante says about 800,000 flyers and other unsolicited ads reach Montreal doorsteps each week, amounting to more than 41 million flyers per year that wind up in recycling depots and landfills.

"Cities must take strong action to respond to the climate crisis, and this regulation will allow us to reduce at the source a significant quantity of paper and plastic in circulation in Montreal," the mayor said.

Montreal aims to become zero waste by 2030.

Transcontinental generates about $100 million in annual revenue from flyer distribution across Quebec, with Montreal accounting for between 20% and 25% of that figure, according to National Bank analyst Adam Shine. Its revenue in 2021 totalled $2.64 billion.

"As such, the revenue hit would not be very big and the profit impact appears immaterial. That said, the company would not want to see any collateral implications from Montreal's decision that could impact retail distribution and printing elsewhere across its footprint,'' Shine wrote in a note to investors.

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